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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 14 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 70754 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 7 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 illustration 9 Cathedral 8 St. 7 Bishop 6 french 6 France 6 Church 4 Renaissance 4 Louis 4 King 4 John 4 Henry 4 England 4 Dame 3 roman 3 gothic 3 William 3 South 3 Sir 3 Pierre 3 Paris 3 Notre 3 Norman 3 Lady 3 God 3 English 3 Edward 3 Abbey 2 romanesque 2 perpendicular 2 old 2 great 2 early 2 century 2 York 2 Tours 2 Saxon 2 Saint 2 Rouen 2 Rheims 2 Provence 2 Poitiers 2 Paul 2 Mary 2 Lord 2 London 2 Joan 2 Jeanne 2 Jean 2 Gothic Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 3813 church 3229 century 2007 window 1818 work 1671 time 1526 day 1474 cathedral 1468 choir 1449 wall 1422 tower 1416 nave 1170 side 1138 part 1137 city 1083 building 1015 north 1012 man 1007 year 991 chapel 926 transept 910 place 889 town 885 house 821 glass 815 stone 812 arch 811 p. 793 bishop 780 aisle 766 end 754 style 731 foot 696 art 694 king 672 illustration 608 way 604 figure 575 tomb 564 hand 545 one 539 monument 533 life 502 name 497 monk 494 architecture 484 period 477 history 474 roof 466 pier 427 vault Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 10789 _ 4338 St. 2977 de 1540 Cathedral 1428 France 1305 Bishop 920 Paris 850 Norman 776 England 695 Gothic 693 la 673 Hugh 668 Church 569 Henry 567 Dame 554 King 543 John 542 Notre 539 Louis 500 St 475 west 455 William 455 Chapel 445 vol 434 II 425 et 388 English 380 le 371 La 358 Abbot 352 Thomas 352 . 350 Le 340 Lady 330 God 329 Abbey 320 Charles 315 du 308 Edward 302 Scotland 293 Sir 291 Jean 291 Canterbury 290 I. 285 Lord 283 des 283 Renaissance 282 H. 280 Saint 273 Archbishop Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8634 it 4591 he 2240 they 2132 i 2062 we 1463 him 1266 them 751 she 656 us 485 you 452 himself 438 me 422 itself 379 one 347 her 198 themselves 106 thee 57 herself 44 myself 32 ourselves 20 thyself 12 his 9 mine 8 yourself 8 oneself 7 ours 7 hers 6 theirs 5 je 4 au 3 ye 1 épreuves 1 église!= 1 yours 1 tuy 1 tollit 1 thy 1 mayhap 1 ay 1 ''em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 38102 be 9224 have 1561 say 1502 see 1477 make 1440 do 1407 build 1237 come 978 give 968 take 947 find 913 know 887 stand 778 go 727 call 711 remain 668 begin 647 seem 555 become 548 show 535 use 534 hold 532 leave 522 rise 518 pass 518 erect 503 decorate 481 set 469 destroy 468 think 464 lie 455 contain 454 carry 452 found 450 tell 447 follow 447 bear 444 bring 439 appear 404 add 395 fall 394 look 385 die 376 lead 340 carve 338 write 325 rebuild 325 form 323 restore 318 place Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3675 not 2376 great 1924 so 1655 more 1605 here 1510 old 1495 most 1372 very 1344 early 1299 first 1253 only 1170 other 1122 much 1103 little 1096 many 1095 well 1095 now 1056 good 922 up 839 then 815 out 784 as 767 also 758 still 737 ancient 733 new 724 long 721 fine 720 gothic 719 same 710 small 684 even 666 beautiful 665 such 644 large 623 south 621 modern 620 too 605 later 582 high 575 far 553 there 498 last 497 present 493 however 490 perhaps 468 own 456 once 456 never 455 few Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 332 good 289 most 210 least 150 great 139 early 105 old 104 fine 63 high 50 large 39 Most 33 rich 28 low 26 noble 23 late 20 fair 19 bad 18 lovely 16 near 15 young 15 grand 14 strong 14 small 14 eld 13 long 11 pure 10 manif 10 e 9 slight 9 full 8 poor 6 topmost 6 busy 5 true 5 say 5 holy 5 able 4 wise 4 wide 4 simple 4 gay 4 deep 4 dark 4 brave 3 sad 3 proud 3 narrow 3 mere 3 lofty 3 happy 3 c'' Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1206 most 49 well 21 least 4 near 1 topmost 1 persecutest 1 oldest 1 l''art 1 greatest 1 early 1 blackest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 www.gutenberg.org 4 www.archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 2 http://www.archive.org 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/36552/36552-h/36552-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/36552/36552-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/32255/32255-h/32255-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/32255/32255-h.zip 1 http://www.archive.org/details/yorkminster00cust 1 http://www.archive.org/details/cathedralcitieso00colluoft Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11 _ see _ 10 cathedral is not 9 _ is early 9 _ is very 8 window is modern 7 days gone by 6 _ is norman 5 _ is modern 5 _ is similar 5 cathedral is very 5 cathedral was originally 5 church is cruciform 4 cathedral is more 4 choir was not 4 church is not 4 church is now 4 church was dedicated 4 church was now 4 nave is very 4 transept is norman 4 windows are later 4 windows are perpendicular 4 work went on 3 _ are extremely 3 _ is good 3 _ is perpendicular 3 cathedral has not 3 cathedral is full 3 cathedral is hardly 3 cathedral was not 3 chapels are early 3 choir are more 3 choir is late 3 choir is very 3 church is very 3 church was entirely 3 church was originally 3 church was probably 3 city is not 3 nave is xii 3 tower is modern 3 tower was originally 3 transepts are not 3 wall is entirely 3 walls are norman 3 window is perpendicular 3 window is very 2 _ are interesting 2 _ are perpendicular 2 _ are similar Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 cathedral is not only 1 _ is not colombe 1 _ is not so 1 _ were not general 1 aisle was no easy 1 aisles have no chapels 1 buildings are not so 1 cathedral had not yet 1 cathedral has not yet 1 cathedral is no exception 1 cathedral is not dependent 1 cathedral shows no charm 1 cathedral was not only 1 cathedrals have no setting 1 centuries is not however 1 centuries were not so 1 century had no cause 1 century was not content 1 chapels are not very 1 choir are not parallel 1 choir has no aisles 1 choir has no triforium 1 choir is not truly 1 choir make no pretense 1 choir was not apsidal 1 church are not great 1 church had no sooner 1 church has no remarkable 1 church has no transept 1 church has no transepts 1 church was no menial 1 churches were not yet 1 city had no bishop 1 city is not especially 1 city is not only 1 city is not very 1 day is no church 1 day was not yet 1 france are not only 1 france is no more 1 france is not possible 1 france were no less 1 france were not wholly 1 house are no more 1 man did not really 1 man has no one 1 nave are not quite 1 nave is not sufficiently 1 north has no such 1 north is not unpleasing A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 21688 author = Butler, Dugald title = Scottish Cathedrals and Abbeys date = keywords = Abbey; Andrews; Architecture; Bishop; Cathedral; Church; David; Dr.; Ecclesiastical; Edinburgh; Giles; Glasgow; Ibid; James; John; King; Lord; Mary; Norman; Paisley; Queen; Robert; Scotland; Sir; St.; scottish summary = Roman Catholic Church, and with the building of cathedrals and abbeys. The Abernethy Round Tower, the Priory of Restennet, Forfarshire, and St. Regulus'' or St. Rule''s Church, St. Andrews, illustrate the transition that place the name of Kilrimont.[28] The earliest Celtic church at St. Andrews was probably, like that of Iona, constructed with wattles and portion of the lower church at the south-west angle as the most ancient of an aisleless choir, a nave with two aisles, a north-west tower, and a bishop probably built the cathedral church, munificently endowed it, abbot''s house.[199] A short distance north-east of the abbey church, at After the Reformation the rood-screen gave place to a wall, and St. Nicholas was divided into two churches, the West consisting of the The church contains a central nave with north and south aisles (the The south wall of the nave of the church extends along the north id = 32255 author = Collins, W. W. (William Wiehe) title = Cathedral Cities of Spain: 60 Reproductions from Original Water Colours date = keywords = illustration summary = by Internet Archive (http://www.archive.org) file which includes the 60 lovely original illustrations (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/32255/32255-h/32255-h.htm) (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/32255/32255-h.zip) http://www.archive.org/details/cathedralcitieso00colluoft Five Portfolios of Colour Plates English Cathedrals. 60 reproductions from original water colours by W. 60 reproductions from original water colours by W. 60 reproductions from original water colours by W. French Cathedral. 60 reproductions from original water colours by Herbert Marshall. 56 reproductions from original water colours by Renei Binet. 58 reproductions from original water colours and paintings by W. Books on Architecture, Decoration and Illustration water color. helpful, so reminiscent as these same notes of color when viewed in of color plates, being copies of original water color drawings by [Illustration: OVIEDO. _The old Cathedral._] _South Door of the Cathedral._] _Door of the Cathedral._] [Illustration: AVILA.] _The Cathedral._] _The Cathedral._] _The Cathedral._] _The Cathedral._] _The Cathedral._] _The Cathedral._] _The Cathedral._] _The Cathedral._] _The Cathedral._] _The Cathedral._] _Interior of the Cathedral._] _Exterior of the Cathedral._] id = 35237 author = Collins, W. W. (William Wiehe) title = Cathedral Cities of England 60 reproductions from original water-colours date = keywords = illustration summary = Cathedral Cities of England [Illustration: BATH CHRISTCHURCH GATEWAY] [Illustration: CANTERBURY [Illustration: CANTERBURY BISHOP LLOYD''S PALACE AND WATERGATE STREET] [Illustration: CHESTER [Illustration: CHESTER [Illustration: CHESTER [Illustration: CHESTER EASTGATE STREET] [Illustration: CHICHESTER INTERIOR OF CATHEDRAL LOOKING ACROSS THE [Illustration: DURHAM [Illustration: DURHAM [Illustration: DURHAM [Illustration: DURHAM [Illustration: DURHAM FRAMWELL GATE BRIDGE] [Illustration: ELY [Illustration: ELY [Illustration: ELY [Illustration: ELY FROM THE PALACE GARDENS] THE CATHEDRAL AND OLD PARLIAMENT HOUSE] [Illustration: GLOUCESTER [Illustration: GLOUCESTER [Illustration: GLOUCESTER [Illustration: HEREFORD PAUL''S AND LUDGATE HILL] [Illustration: LONDON [Illustration: LONDON THE NORTH TRANSEPT] THE NORTH TRANSEPT] THE WEST TOWERS] [Illustration: LINCOLN [Illustration: LINCOLN [Illustration: LINCOLN THE STEEP HILL] [Illustration: NORWICH [Illustration: NORWICH [Illustration: NORWICH [Illustration: OXFORD [Illustration: OXFORD [Illustration: PETERBOROUGH [Illustration: PETERBOROUGH [Illustration: RIPON [Illustration: ROCHESTER CATHEDRAL AND CASTLE] THE MARKET CROSS] HIGH STREET GATEWAY INTO THE CLOSE] CATHERINE''S HILL] THE CATHEDRAL] THE CATHEDRAL] THE CATHEDRAL] CATHEDRAL AND THE POOLS] MICKLEGATE BAR] MONK BAR] BOOTHAM BAR] [Illustration: [Illustration: id = 40356 author = Collins, W. W. (William Wiehe) title = Cathedral Cities of Spain date = keywords = Alfonso; Altar; Capilla; Castile; Cathedral; Church; Cordova; Ferdinand; Granada; High; Juan; Leon; Pedro; Salamanca; San; Santa; Seville; Spain; Toledo; gothic; illustration; moorish summary = San Ferdinand, King of Leon and Castile, pushed his conquests far south of silver work, with the arms of Castile and Leon, San Ferdinand''s two In almost every quarter of the city fine old houses are to be found north-west corner ending at the south-east extremity where the present rises high above the surrounding roofs, like a great Liner with a crowd Many remains of Roman days may be seen built into the houses of the old To-day Barcelona is far in advance of any other city of Spain. The columns throughout the Cathedral were built to bear great weight, The large cloisters to the south-west of the Cathedral were built by Cathedral stone and the time-worn colour of the figures which decorate out, and the Cathedral to-day stands a magnificent church and grand Another good church is San Pablo, partly rebuilt by the great Cardinal id = 43402 author = Ditchfield, P. H. (Peter Hampson) title = The Cathedrals of Great Britain: Their History and Architecture date = keywords = Abbey; Abbot; Archbishop; Bishop; Cathedral; Chapel; Choir; Church; Dean; Edward; England; English; Henry; III; John; King; Lady; Lord; Mary; Norman; North; Paul; Richard; Saxon; Scott; Sir; South; St.; Transept; Virgin; William; early; illustration; perpendicular summary = Cathedral church, and the former probably founded the monastery of St. Peter called Westminster on Thorney Island, a place then "terrible work is mainly due, and for some of earlier portions to Mr. G.F. Watts, R.A. The _Transepts_ have good windows, representing (north) the twelve The _North Choir Transept_ (Early English) contains the tomb of St. William, to whom we have already referred, and whose shrine brought Perpendicular--Clerestory of the nave, west window, Lady Chapel. portion of the Cathedral, built by Bishop Walkelin in the old Norman The Lady Chapel has work of divers periods--north and south walls The panelling is the work of Bishop Fox. The south chapel (Early English) is the Chantry of Bishop Langton, who walls are on the north and east, and Early English on south and west. Two storeys of the south-west tower are original Norman work, with Saxon--East wall of Lady Chapel and north choir aisle, and id = 46069 author = Edwards, George Wharton title = Vanished Halls and Cathedrals of France date = keywords = Arras; Cathedral; Charles; Coucy; Count; English; France; Germans; God; Hôtel; Jeanne; Joan; King; Louis; Noyon; Paris; Quentin; Rheims; Senlis; St.; Ville; flemish; french; great; illustration; old; town summary = Europe," the great examples of architecture of the early days of France Flemish gables, and the beautiful lace like tower of the Town Hall the upper end by the admirable lofty towered Town Hall, was filling fast At the end of a quiet street which crossed the busy and crowded Rue St. Aubert, we came upon the remains of a remarkable old town gate, and Continuing the wandering one reached the fine old town gate, the ancient Arras and Lens, that the great and noble monuments of the ancient town The town was given back to France in 1589, and in the following year was As it is now six great cathedral towns the bells from the ruins of the Cathedral, and the old Town Hall, and the town in great pomp and splendor, remaining for some days with his great towers of the beloved old cathedral, and that the walls of the id = 10120 author = Hutton, Edward title = England of My Heart : Spring date = keywords = Abbey; Bishop; Canterbury; Castle; Cathedral; Chaucer; Chichester; Edward; England; English; God; Henry; John; King; Lady; Lewes; London; Norman; Rochester; Saxon; South; Street; Thomas; Weald; William; Winchester; roman summary = great church he helped to build; though you know that wonder by the know by heart, all we hope for, all we love and venerate, under God. And there abides a sense of old times gone, of ancient law, of cruciform church of Our Lady with central tower, a great nave, arcaded The great church which remains to us is said to have been used by the The chapel became in time the parish church of this little place on way for the great Norman building out of which the church we have has stood to the south-west of the church a great bell tower, a detached One comes to Battle to-day along that great and beautiful road, high came to the great church of Boxgrove, which stands between the road I Norman church, the work of Bishop Ralph, whose great stone coffin The great Norman church which Bishop Walkelin built to take the place id = 29820 author = Mansfield, M. F. (Milburg Francisco) title = The Cathedrals of Northern France date = keywords = Amiens; Beauvais; Bishop; Cathedral; Church; Dame; Etienne; France; Loire; Louis; Notre; Paris; Pierre; Reims; Renaissance; Rouen; St.; Tours; french; gothic; illustration summary = A little to the right lies the one-time cathedral of Notre Dame, architectural splendours, which, with the Cathedral of Notre Dame, form architecturally, with the grand Cathedral of Notre Dame de Reims. Of all the cathedrals of France, Notre Dame de Paris is most firmly western façade, the grand portal of the usually accepted great church secular monuments, headed by the grand Cathedral of Notre Dame, form an is the fact that this cathedral is the only Gothic church, so ranking, a wonderful old church which at one time ranked as a cathedral, and port, the Cathedral of Notre Dame exists to-day more as a monument to throughout France during the five centuries of church building in the In general this thirteenth-century church is in the best style of its Cathedral of Notre Dame and the Church of St. Pierre. Notre Dame de Coutances is one of the few really great Gothic churches id = 35212 author = Mansfield, M. F. (Milburg Francisco) title = The Cathedrals of Southern France date = keywords = Arles; Avignon; Bishop; Carcassonne; Church; Dame; Etienne; France; Jean; Louis; Narbonne; Notre; Pierre; Poitiers; Provence; Puy; Renaissance; Revolution; Rhône; St.; Vienne; cathedral; century; french; gothic; illustration; roman; romanesque summary = places which shelter a great cathedral church in the south are of little However, little remains in church architecture of the pre-tenth century diocese is to-day a suffragan of Bourges, and its cathedral of St. Etienne, while not a very ancient structure, is most interesting as to second, the city''s grand architectural monuments, cathedrals, churches, Some have said that this cathedral church dates from the fifth century. The chief ecclesiastical monuments of Aix are the cathedral of St. Sauveur, with its most unusual _baptistère_; the church of St. Jean-de-Malte of the fourteenth century; and the comparatively modern The cathedral of St. Sauveur is, in part, an eleventh-century church. As to its churches, its old twelfth-century cathedral remains to-day a smaller cathedral church of the early eleventh century. Three cathedral churches here before the XIth century Gothic church (not, however, the former cathedral), XVth century id = 41687 author = O''Reilly, Elizabeth Boyle title = How France Built Her Cathedrals: A Study in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries date = keywords = Abbot; Abbé; Archéologique; Bernard; Bishop; Bourges; Bulletin; Burgundy; Cathedral; Champagne; Charles; Chartres; Cluny; Congrès; Dame; Denis; Dijon; England; Europe; Flamboyant; France; God; Gothic; Guillaume; Henry; Histoire; Jean; Jeanne; John; Laon; Laurens; Les; Louis; Lyons; Mans; Martin; Michel; Middle; Midi; Normandy; Notre; Paris; Paul; Philippe; Pierre; Plantagenet; Poitiers; Renaissance; Rheims; Rouen; Saint; St.; Suger; Tours; Troyes; VII; XIII; french; romanesque; xii summary = of Paris show early trials of Gothic vaulting--St. Germain-des-Prés, St. Martin-des-Champs, St. Pierre-de-Montmartre--St. Louis and his friend, Angels"--Martyrdom of Rheims in the World War. Cathedral of Amiens, the Parthenon of Gothic art--Bishop Evrard de XIIIand XIV-century windows of Troyes Cathedral--St. Urbain''s church bishops--Early Christian martyrs of Rome''s chief city in Gaul--St. Martin d''Ainay''s abbatial dedicated in 1107--Cathedral choir late XII Cathedral of Le Mans--XII-century nave built by notable prelates--Bishop south aisle originally a separate Romanesque church, XII century--Good church has fluted pilasters (XII century)--Autun Cathedral''s Romanesque stateliest church in Burgundy--Its Romanesque nave and Gothic choir 1160 as Ile-de-France Gothic--Its Lady chapel built by Bishop Pierre had learned its imagery from Rheims, that German Norbert, revered of St. Bernard, had helped France in the days when Gothic art was in formation, Gothic vaulting of the two abbey churches of Caen were XII-century of Primary Gothic art in France, the transept arm built by the crusading id = 43170 author = Peard, Frances Mary title = Prentice Hugh date = keywords = Agrippa; Bassett; Cathedral; Exeter; Franklyn; Gervase; Hugh; Joan; Master; Mistress; Prothasy; Roger; Sir; Stephen; Wat; elyas; nay summary = "Thou art a sturdy little varlet," said the friar, coming forward with a And, Hugh, thou hast heard thy mother speak of Exeter? I tell thee what, Hugh, thou shalt ask the master "Thou art a sturdy little varlet," said the master, looking at him "Hugh, thou hast not forgotten thy promise," he said anxiously. "Thou hast worse than Jakes, my poor little lad," Stephen said, "No, father," said poor little Hugh, glancing fearfully round. "Leave Agrippa here," he said to Hugh, "and do thou run out and look at prayed Master Gervase to take Hugh, telling him that he was a good boy than Hugh''s; she said little, but ran hastily about the house, and even "Nay, reverend sir," said Hugh, "I am Master Gervase''s apprentice." flung her arms round his neck, said that Hugh was good, the king had "No greenwood for thee, Hugh, to-day," Elyas had said, and the young man id = 36552 author = Purey-Cust, Arthur P. (Arthur Perceval) title = York Minster date = keywords = Archbishop; Minster; St.; William; York; illustration summary = greatest architects of mediæval times, glazed the great East window with east window, which is entirely filled with old glass, consists of nine south aisles of the nave, with only a little modern glass in the windows are studded with ancient shields, but a great part of the glass Chapter House the seven windows, of five lights each, are filled with the side windows of the transepts there is some old glass, and the great Sisters window is an almost complete specimen of Early English glass, tracery lights of the vestibule windows are filled with old Norman The tracery lights of the east window of the north aisle seem to me The choir transept windows have been restored, but contain a large light presenting his window to the Archbishop. materials, _e.g._, white glass for the great windows of the new choir, taste, the great windows glowing with painted glass of each successive id = 22718 author = Rose, Elise Whitlock title = Cathedrals and Cloisters of the South of France, Volume 1 date = keywords = Avignon; Bishop; Cathedral; Church; Cloister; Dame; France; Gothic; Palace; Pope; Provence; Provençal; Romanesque; Saint; South; XVII; century; french; great; illustration; little; old; roman; sidenote summary = Within the French Church from early times, these two great forces were of true mediæval greatness, it is the finest church of the city. and is a little dead city, the seat of an ancient Provençal "Cathedral parish church is of the very far past, having lost its Cathedral rank small, Saint-Jérome is large, where the old church is simple, the newer created the Church of Saint-Mary, co-cathedral with that of Notre-Dame the Church in the tight little city of the Provençal hills. church, the traveller passed under the old round arch of the Bishop''s The little Cathedral-churches of Provence are See and its lost city, the Cathedral-church was established at the light of its every-day life, the great height of the church and its However, as a Bishop must have a Cathedral-church, the Church of Saint-Michel which has been the Cathedral since 1803, a id = 34818 author = Sherrill, Charles Hitchcock title = Stained Glass Tours in England date = keywords = Canterbury; Edward; England; France; Henry; Jesse; Lady; London; Oxford; Renaissance; Salisbury; St.; York; early; english; french; glass; perpendicular; window summary = lids, and let in the light, and filled his windows with glasses of provided large windows, and the glazier filled them with great pictures Perpendicular times) in the huge sheet of glass filling the great east Day''s excellent "Windows of Stained Glass" (1897). richly coloured glass of the "mosaic" type, and also uncoloured windows The chief window of the north-west transept, generally called the chapel glazing of the eastern windows of the north and south choir aisles is the English Decorated and the French fourteenth century windows. Lady chapel are single windows containing fragments of ancient glass. window of the northerly chapel has five lancets, although the glass was decorated figure-and-canopy glass preserved from the earlier and decorated figure-and-canopy glass preserved from the earlier and glazing the first east window, it is absent from the early glass, windows retain their original glass only in the tracery lights, but it