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. Eric Lease Morgan May 27, 2019 Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 21 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1095508 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 73 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 21 time 21 roman 21 history 21 french 21 british 21 William 21 Society 21 Sir 21 Scotland 21 Royal 21 Rome 21 Paris 21 Lord 21 London 21 Latin 21 John 21 James 21 Italy 21 God 21 France 21 Europe 21 England 21 Edinburgh 21 Church 20 year 20 work 20 italian 20 european 20 VOL 20 United 20 Thomas 20 Spain 20 South 20 September 20 Sea 20 Oxford 20 November 20 North 20 New 20 March 20 Long 20 King 20 June 20 July 20 India 20 Henry 20 George 20 Egypt 20 East 20 Duke Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 36909 time 35776 year 35468 part 22110 man 20674 work 20264 place 20024 country 18901 water 18718 number 17842 foot 17607 tion 16765 town 16286 name 16230 mile 15224 state 15086 form 14904 power 14574 body 14371 point 14356 side 14231 case 14031 line 13377 order 12942 day 12804 law 11407 life 10975 king 10866 surface 10820 force 10649 city 10638 history 10534 length 10285 period 9912 other 9852 character 9723 land 9711 river 9452 age 9431 kind 9361 object 9295 end 9236 subject 9219 person 9174 fig 8974 course 8957 system 8932 hand 8856 house 8692 church 8650 ° Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 13260 . 12928 Mr 12019 c. 9252 England 9111 re¬ 8479 France 8213 de 7949 St 7219 Dr 6735 ing 6716 M. 6695 Sir 6611 in¬ 6243 London 5247 Paris 5092 Europe 4988 ’s 4939 II 4819 de¬ 4817 E. 4767 John 4716 Lord 4502 N. 4454 Rome 4407 S. 4355 Scotland 4160 ^ 3934 English 3888 New 3884 dis¬ 3795 W. 3788 y 3726 ed 3631 vol 3558 Italy 3555 Britain 3506 Charles 3465 French 3385 America 3351 Spain 3337 India 3299 _ 3203 C 3140 la 3120 Lat 3000 f 2985 et 2973 i. 2956 I. 2946 Great Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 188332 it 134867 he 65472 they 46559 we 36488 them 30464 him 20063 i 12351 himself 7381 us 7017 themselves 6733 itself 5255 she 2858 you 2398 her 1966 me 753 ourselves 708 one 512 herself 356 myself 173 his 137 mine 116 thee 110 u 107 theirs 105 hey 96 antennae 92 ours 80 s 78 yourself 64 ihey 55 oi 51 em 48 p 45 ii 43 y 39 f 39 de- 35 ay 32 o 21 v 21 je 19 ’s 19 ty 19 thyself 18 w''as 18 iv 17 tt 17 ng 17 > 15 w Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 872188 be 199823 have 38270 make 29250 give 26865 find 26347 take 26316 do 20395 form 20085 call 19078 see 18250 say 16108 become 15188 appear 13439 know 13342 contain 12986 follow 12581 produce 12497 use 10710 bear 10483 seem 10426 pass 10425 receive 10382 carry 9891 show 9816 consist 9418 place 9153 suppose 9135 come 8974 obtain 8894 leave 8705 bring 8630 accord 8420 publish 8213 employ 8170 consider 7991 require 7681 hold 7567 remain 7428 fall 7352 observe 7348 continue 7242 write 7073 die 6946 draw 6791 apply 6664 increase 6618 divide 6494 go 6462 enter 6369 describe Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 79788 not 48468 other 46958 great 42348 more 33868 most 33245 very 33031 so 32185 same 31709 only 30957 first 27605 also 21423 many 21231 such 21189 much 20981 well 20890 now 19662 as 19196 large 19007 however 18712 small 18459 then 17594 long 15448 thus 14306 even 14098 several 13892 good 13684 high 13337 less 13294 general 13281 about 13099 up 12771 different 12555 still 11994 out 11892 own 11667 little 11389 therefore 10625 last 10401 new 10168 whole 10087 far 10083 few 9988 here 9666 low 9335 nearly 9192 various 9164 early 9163 equal 9008 common 8964 second Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7649 most 5840 good 4686 least 4578 great 2920 high 2016 large 1585 early 1302 fine 956 low 655 small 616 eld 578 Most 541 near 501 old 493 strong 421 bad 414 pre¬ 404 late 403 slight 381 simple 332 rich 282 long 222 deep 211 noble 205 manif 202 lofty 198 able 181 pure 159 ter 158 young 149 wide 144 short 129 full 102 warm 101 bright 99 narrow 91 heavy 89 e 87 broad 86 wise 85 hot 84 happy 82 rude 81 clear 76 gross 75 weak 73 close 72 cheap 71 poor 70 wild Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 26219 most 1031 well 758 least 29 highest 18 near 15 long 8 terest 8 hard 8 greatest 8 goethe 7 worst 7 oc¬ 5 finest 5 fast 5 easiest 4 soon 4 oldest 4 ob¬ 4 early 2 x 2 sphere.1 2 somest 2 shortest 2 quick 2 officinalis 2 infest 2 heaviest 2 ful¬ 2 ex¬ 2 deepest 2 brightest 1 ® 1 youngest 1 wr''y''''^ 1 wor¬ 1 w7ere 1 w''ere 1 v—- 1 vest 1 tweenn 1 thickest 1 thefurthest 1 temperament.—next 1 strongest 1 spontane¬ 1 smallest 1 richest 1 purest 1 pre¬ 1 pa¬ 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 94 town is well 41 town has also 31 country is very 28 town is very 28 water is not 26 man is not 21 work is not 20 body is not 20 work give notice 20 works are not 19 town is generally 19 town is ill 18 body is usually 18 country is not 18 place is very 18 town is chiefly 18 town is irregularly 18 works are very 17 case is very 17 men are not 17 name is not 17 tion is not 17 water is then 16 place is now 15 country is fertile 15 town is not 15 town was formerly 14 body is generally 14 country is generally 13 country is well 13 name is also 13 town contains several 13 town has several 13 town is regularly 12 body is almost 12 case is not 12 country is hilly 12 men were not 12 name does not 12 name is now 12 name was also 12 town is also 12 water is very 12 work was not 12 works are numerous 11 bodies are not 11 country are not 11 lines are not 11 state is not 11 time is not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 time had not yet 5 country are not very 4 body is not so 4 time is not far 4 town is not well 3 country is not so 3 men were no longer 3 time has not yet 3 time is not yet 3 water is not so 2 bodies are not decomposable 2 country is not sufficient 2 law is not only 2 law is not so 2 life was not safe 2 lines are not so 2 man has no other 2 men were not sufficiently 2 name does not again 2 parts are not so 2 point is not more 2 state was no longer 2 time was not yet 2 town are not very 2 town has no manufactures 2 water is not only 2 works are not more 2 works are not very 2 works have not yet 2 works were not only 2 years have not yet 1 * was no advantage 1 . have no flowers 1 . having no support 1 bodies are no way 1 bodies are not numerous 1 bodies are not only 1 bodies are not so 1 bodies are not uncommon 1 bodies do not always 1 bodies had no properties 1 bodies has no influence 1 bodies has no tendency 1 bodies have no ducts 1 bodies have no preferable 1 bodies have not only 1 bodies is no doubt 1 bodies is not capable 1 bodies produces not merely 1 bodies were not backward Sizes of items; "Measures in words, how big is each item?" ---------------------------------------------------------- 1389692 193819047 1199672 193469393 1163390 193322701 1145364 193696086 1118198 193108326 1111488 193819046 1102310 193916150 1093790 193108325 1092035 193322700 1078886 193696085 1077365 193109115 1067455 193469392 1047239 193109114 1043796 193109113 1038814 193696088 1031533 193592632 822611 192984260 193322698 193108324 193696087 193322699 Readability of items; "How difficult is each item to read?" ----------------------------------------------------------- 76.0 193322700 76.0 193592632 75.0 193696086 75.0 193469393 74.0 193109113 74.0 193109114 74.0 193819047 73.0 193916150 73.0 193696088 73.0 193108326 73.0 193322701 72.0 193696085 72.0 193108325 72.0 193109115 72.0 193469392 71.0 193819046 65.0 192984260 193322698 193108324 193696087 193322699 Item summaries; "In a narrative form, how can each item be abstracted?" ----------------------------------------------------------------------- 192984260 the faculty of Imagination, both Reason and the great men of antiquity, Archimedes is perMemory are, to a certain extent, combined,— haps he who is the best entitled to he placed hy the definition given by Descartes in his second Meditation : " Imaginary nihil aliud est quam rei corporeaz fignram sen imagrnem contemplari a power of the mind, which (as I have elsewhere observed) appears to me to be most precisely ex¬ knowledges, " that the notions of these great men concerning the important science of morality were far from being suffi¬ logic, I not only understood the principles of that science, but formed my mind to a habit of thinking and reasoning, I had the far different ideas of space, figure, or motion, the several varieties whereof change the appearances of its proper objects, of History, Moral Science, and General Literature." It was with great pleasure I observed, that one of the first objects 193108324 193108325 pressure arises in the opposite direction, it acts in some cased with lead, so as to sink empty; each of them havdegree like a valve, shutting the passage, until the increasing a bung-hole in its lowest parts to let in the water as Since the completion of Ramsgate harbour, the diving-Divingbell has been applied with great success to various other bell emoperations of a similar kind in different parts of the king-Pj"^^ *n In the eventful years which followed he continued to only reaches a semblance of exactness, it produces or perlive chiefly at Lansdowne House, or at Bowood, where petuates error in the exact proportion of its seeming apthe most remarkable men of Europe as well as of Britain proach to truth. square ; and this addition is half the square of the velocity versely as the velocities in the different points of the abwhieh those forces would generate in the body by impelscissa, then the area will be as the times of describing the 193108326 lian tube placed in that plane ; and one-tenth of an inch of brought to a state of rapid motion ; so the ball from a popmercury is just equal to the weight of the lowest stratum gun or wind-gun is gradually accelerated along the barrel in the upper and lower house, had repeatedly taken place kind, was found to consist rarely of food, rather less unfrecomparatively without result, the largest effect produced by quently of fuel, and still less unfrequently of clothes, partiany committee of either house being that of the committee cularly shoes ; but its most usual form was that of relieving a estia punishment, was a Mr Bromley, one of James II.''s Pdpish apostates; whilst the particular statements which he makes with respec o imsel and the young Duke of Norfolk of 1700, as two schoolfellows of Pope at that time and place, together with his voluntary promise to come forward in person and verify his account if it should happen to be challenged ;—are all, we repeat, so many pre¬ 193109113 ther ing darkly above the head of him who was thus giving the great boast of his country, wdiom it was scarcely posdelight to a large and widening circle of friends. year, consisting of twelve lunar months, contains only 354 order to distribute the deficient months through the pedays ; its commencement consequently anticipates that of riod in the most equable manner, the whole period may as president of the board of control.'' During the last only between conflicting kingdoms, but between the hostwo years great events had taken place, in bringing tile factions of individual nations. they form an essential part of the authorized collection, has more recently been published by Eichhorn of GdttinThey are however the production of a private lawgen, well known for his history of the German law. 193109114 ing at the end of the first second of its fall, being necessarily equal to twice the actual number of feet it has fallen to notice a very useful form of the dead escapement, which escapeis adopted in many of the best turret clocks, called the pinment. Clock and in the 12-hour wheel at the proper place, to raise the liftWorlj1 P''ece which lets off the alarum at that time. the end of that year a general fall of prices took place, and dividuals ; a matter of no little importance in a country like individuours, where merchants both constitute so large a portion ofalsthe community, and exercise such influence on the proceed¬ feelings of a very different nature, contributed in no small charged with having thus entered into the state of matridegree to the elevation of Cranmer, and to the downfall mony, he admitted the fact, but at the same time affirmed 193109115 According to it, all men are born, and remain, be deprived of it, except when the public necessity, lefree and equal in rights; and social distinctions can only gaily ascertained, shall evidently require it, and on conbe founded on common utility. The principle ments, without any distinction but that of ability and virof sovereignty resides essentially in the nation ; and no tue ; secondly, that all contributions shall be divided equalbody of men, no individual, can exercise an authority which ly among all the citizens, in proportion to their means; Seven ships of state of affairs, left Verona on the 13th, having ordered the Austhe line were accordingly sent out for this purpose, under Massena to follow him with the centre to Rivoli as ffist rians* It was accordcould collect in the northern parts of the Roman states, ingly agreed that a column of French troops should adIn the end of November General Mack entered Rome vance against the capital by a circuitous route, and endeawithout opposition. 193322698 193322699 193322700 The western and equinocorigin; for C Tmolus of Fischer occurs in the vicinity of tial parts of Africa also yield us the species of PetalocheiOrenburg in Asia, under the 50th degree of north latirus and Enceladus, while the Cape of Good Hope is retude.3 Of the magnificent Dynastidce, termed by Mr markable for the genera Anthia and Brachycerus. Two species joint of the labial palpi small or indistinct, and the prewere worshipped by the ancient Egyptians, and form a ceding larger than the first), exhibits a short body with a In the genus Cryptocephalus sternum ; and Podontia, Dalman, in which that part proproperly so called, the body is cylindrical, and the thorax jects in the form of a short and conical point, the end of 193322701 they combine together on the banks of lakes and rivers and no way compressed, and furnished, as well as the abfor the purpose of attacking such quadrupeds as come to domen, with transverse rows of square scales. It is distinguished in Brazil by the title of Cucuriuba, and passes a great portion of its time in the water, It forms (it is said erroneously) the genus Chersydrus of Baron Cuvier,—the great French naturalist having The legitimacy of the poetical element as an aid to The relaeloquence, not only as a powerful means of calling up attions betention, but also as a direct step on the way towards the end tween peraimed at by persuasion, will be put on a ground yet broader, suasi011 an(i History, which continued for a series of years, of appointing military tribunes, six in number, in the place of the two was a place of great importance in ancient times. 193469392 English miles; its greatest breadth, from Durazzo to Cathe other quarters of the world belong in a peculiar manvale at the foot of Mount Pangoeus (a branch of Rhodope), ner to Greece, and distinguish it in the same proportion the states included within these limits had little or no share chain, bearing the names of Scomius and Rhodope anin those splendid actions which have shed so much glory ciently, passes south-eastward, and sends off branches on the peninsula, including Eubcea, is 14,800 ; and both nucleus another great chain passes south and south-easttogether amount to 23,800 square miles—an extent of surward, under the ancient names of Scardus, Pindus, Cithaeface not exceeding two-fifths of England, or one-fifth of ron, and Parnes, and terminates at Cape Colonna, the late years have been so great that the town generally pre¬ 193469393 If an accurate model be made of a ship, and if it be placed Seamanin a stream of water, and ridden in this manner by a rope shipmade fast at any point D of the bow, it will arrange itself a fine sailwell, and that all movements by means of the rudder are perer* formed with great rapidity when the velocity of the ship is Remarks When first the steam-engine was applied to the propulupon best sjon 0f vessels, the propeller universally adopted was the ing water to the harbour a great work was constructed, built with great steam-power, and with finely-formed bodies, the results obtained from vessels of known form and power, surfaces. used in , Desiccating Process ; the Number of Days in which the Seasoning was effected; and the Ratio oj 1 ime in ghipwhich equal degrees of Seasoning were produced, upon duplicate Specimens by the artificial and by the ordinary Building. 193592632 rocks, in crystals, or rarely forming beds and veins. the water contained in rocks, and effects great changes on the surface of a bed of limestone the roots or attachments of a particular class of marine animals, called encrinites, which when alive were fixed to the rock by a times take place with respect to a small group ot beds wit central point, producing long oval forms like that of an in¬ sequent movements have taken place, causing fresh openings, and new deposits of crystals formed in these openings. form the mining districts of Allendale, Alston, and Weardale, there is one single bed of limestone, named the " Great banks in the country parts of that state, and generally in one year of age to be three or four times as great, and in some cases, six times as great, as in the next year. 193696085 nated bone is attached; and then another hollow, forming symphysis or chin (mentum), indicating the original separathe posterior end of the middle nasal passage, and with tion of the bone into two parts,—a vertical line diverging The surface of these bones is so conof the general characters of structure common to the long structed that it forms an arched or convex inclined plane, In his last work he selects as an example one of the Moluscx, which, as it moved along, felt an inclination to explore by means, of touch the bodies in its path : for this purpose it caused the nervous and other fluids to move in masses successively to certain points of its head, and thus in process of time it acquired its horns or tentacula !! 193696086 As the earth advances from Capricorn towards Aries, and motion, take EC and EA proportional to the two velothe sun appears to move from Cancer towards Libra, the cities respectively, and, having completed the parallelnorth pole recedes from the light, which causes the days ogram EABC, draw the diagonal EB. Halley found that the comet of 1680 had appassed very near the earth ; and Laplace calculated, that preached its perihelion about the time of the universal deif its mass had been equal in density to that of the earth, luge, and thought it probable that that great catastrophe Colonel Fabvier succeeded in forcing his way through the means of fiacres; a large customhouse, a quay, and a lazaTurkish lines with 500 men and a supply of ammunition, retto, have been erected; and the port presents rather a bustand thus affording immediate relief, yet the total defeat of the ling appearance. 193696087 193696088 different in different magnets, and decreased quicker at great distances than at small ones, an experimental fact, as shown by Sir W. and causing it to oscillate horizontally opposite different 0f Coupoints of a magnetic bar placed vertically, Coulomb comlomb. The most valuable part, however, of Professor HanOn terressteen''s work is that which relates to the number, position, tri^1 magand revolution of the magnetic poles. netism at different points of its surface, and of the changes of terreswhich it undergoes either progressively, or at different times trial magof the day, and different seasons of the year, has become netismone of the most important practical problems connected garded as pertaining to the subject, yet, in reference to consciousness in general, and to''the p^rsona^elfn ^ °f Se11lSation 14 is regarded as belonging to the object, and, as such, is present or absent in different acts of consJSn * proPerly 80 called> must be re¬ 193819046 The French used to affirm, g^h Portralt could not be great in extensive comthat David''s principle was the same as that of the Greeks, art, to asse '' they ''nted walls of a provincial city gave tion of its time as is observed to be the case in the existing perennibranchiate reptiles ; in which, notwithstanding the degree of de¬ The upper end of the arm-bone is equally well By the application of the correlative principle to the fossil mammarkcd by powerful ridges for muscular implantation, especially malian remains of pliocene and later deposits, the Herbivora have as the notes of the scale, so the nature of the great spirit is single, though its forms be manifold, arising from the consequence of acts. state, and is let out in small portions to separate families, the Spanish language is coming into use, while the preThe prairies of Paraguay, being less extensive than those vailing dialect throughout the country is the Guarani, 193819047 available, with advantage in point2 of speed and the smallness the author constructed and applied for the purpose at Vaof battery power which it requires, for every submarine lencia. MleR°Pe8'' ^een wanting to evade the difficulty of constructing large dispersion of a single crown object-lens, by a smaller congers''s°''con °bject-glasses, arising from the small sizes readily obtainable cave lens, or combination of lenses of high dispersive year in which the great poet was born formed a portion of The " theatre " the following year (chiefly by a royal and noble subscripni Shoreditch, of his day, though styled a " sumptuous tion), and was roofed with tile—a marked advance in usehouse, was only a wooden structure, neglected altogether, fulness if not in architectural beauty. Greek text of the New Testament, in the evidences of the Christian examinareligion, and in Scripture history, take place once a year, and, like tions. 193916150 this and other forced expressions of the like nature produce a fine effect, by giving a burlesque air to the language, and beautifully It appears, then, that, so far as concerns law related to The knowjustice, the knowledge necessary to cure its defects must ledge neinclude,—1, Correct conceptions of the general cases to ^ some worthy act that might be a memorial of the gallantry of military men, and of that due respect they had for true religion and learnVcn''c T*16 co^e£e *lad been established nearly ten years before, but no mention of a library occurs in its accounts until the audit of arranged under the different reigns or periods of governThese numbers are based on the official return made in 1850, by General De La Ilitte (then Minister of the Interior), to Lord Normanby, in consequence of an application from the Foreign Office (at the instance of Mr Ewart''s Committee on Public Libraries).