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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 10 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 75624 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 74 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 Mary 5 illustration 5 Church 4 Saxon 4 Norman 4 Lord 4 John 4 England 4 Bishop 3 church 3 christian 3 St. 3 Sir 3 King 3 Holy 3 FIG 3 English 3 Cathedral 2 plan 2 greek 2 gothic 2 early 2 building 2 Yorks 2 Trinity 2 Sophia 2 Saint 2 Northants 2 Ibid 2 God 2 Abbey 1 turkish 1 south 1 scottish 1 romanesque 1 roman 1 perpendicular 1 nave 1 man 1 look 1 italian 1 good 1 german 1 french 1 egyptian 1 doric 1 column 1 century 1 byzantine 1 apostle Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 4280 church 1958 building 1519 window 1499 wall 1416 work 1321 side 1210 arch 1201 century 1157 part 1139 time 1121 tower 983 nave 903 north 885 aisle 838 p. 821 chapel 804 illustration 800 end 788 plan 741 style 740 man 703 place 684 altar 664 stone 658 architecture 642 choir 632 example 622 period 589 day 588 house 571 roof 570 transept 525 column 520 hand 511 form 496 feature 483 door 479 monastery 477 pier 473 year 468 dome 466 bishop 462 head 444 vault 437 bay 433 capital 422 chancel 421 order 400 doorway 397 city Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 7846 _ 1442 S. 1251 Footnote 1169 St. 990 Church 849 Bishop 787 Norman 691 Lord 596 Cathedral 549 Westray 499 John 425 west 415 Chapel 401 FIG 396 God 389 Mary 379 Mr 376 . 365 Blandamer 343 England 326 St 310 Joliffe 310 Christ 305 Holy 305 English 304 Scotland 292 de 274 I. 267 Miss 266 Sir 259 King 256 south 253 II 250 Sharnall 237 Greek 234 Ibid 233 Henry 230 Saxon 228 Anastasia 225 Constantinople 222 pp 222 Architecture 220 Abbot 220 Abbey 216 vol 216 Lady 214 Gothic 210 Peter 207 east 203 Cullerne Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6157 it 3889 he 2132 we 1805 they 1637 i 1101 she 1067 him 1040 them 921 you 429 us 411 me 367 her 318 himself 221 itself 159 themselves 97 herself 62 one 52 myself 43 ourselves 26 yourself 25 ''em 20 thee 10 thyself 7 yours 6 his 5 whence 4 ye 4 theirs 4 ours 3 hers 3 ''s 2 mine 2 em 2 ee 1 whosoever 1 tô 1 tollit 1 paspates[180 1 oneself 1 ii 1 hisself 1 effigiem 1 as''ll 1 ''--deut Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 31784 be 7513 have 1423 do 1329 say 1207 make 1162 see 944 build 902 take 894 find 806 give 774 know 700 come 602 use 578 call 576 go 557 form 555 stand 527 show 496 erect 477 remain 471 seem 427 leave 424 decorate 412 look 398 become 397 think 388 represent 387 carry 373 appear 365 cover 358 begin 350 place 336 add 334 contain 324 follow 322 set 300 exist 299 bear 295 speak 295 found 292 lead 287 bring 275 hold 273 restore 271 fall 262 accord 261 enter 259 write 252 support 252 rebuild Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3175 not 1361 so 1312 great 1263 very 1219 early 1177 more 1156 other 1019 also 947 much 937 old 853 here 851 only 814 most 798 now 787 many 779 first 765 large 754 south 688 up 673 good 671 same 638 then 622 well 621 small 546 such 541 out 529 little 513 still 506 later 472 fine 467 long 456 central 447 probably 446 high 444 often 441 as 424 sometimes 420 again 418 western 413 low 403 new 398 however 392 beautiful 387 even 384 modern 377 own 375 east 374 down 354 never 347 few Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 192 most 183 good 131 early 122 least 105 fine 84 high 71 great 49 large 41 old 38 low 34 late 20 Most 17 simple 13 small 13 grand 11 rich 10 noble 10 near 10 bad 9 strong 7 eld 6 manif 6 long 6 lofty 4 young 4 rude 4 faint 4 e 4 deep 3 wise 3 slight 3 new 3 hard 3 full 3 dear 3 common 3 bright 2 wide 2 weak 2 warm 2 true 2 sweet 2 soft 2 rare 2 pure 2 poor 2 plain 2 neat 2 l 2 happy Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 622 most 34 well 21 least 3 near 2 early 1 topmost 1 remainest 1 rejoined--"really 1 oldest 1 lest 1 house;--the 1 fillest 1 fairest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 1 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/30290/30290-h/30290-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/30290/30290-h.zip 1 http://archive.org/details/symbolismofchurc00dura Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 14 _ see _ 13 _ is _ 11 _ was _ 10 _ had _ 9 _ is early 8 _ is very 8 time went on 8 window is modern 6 _ is norman 6 _ see page 6 style is early 5 _ is modern 5 _ is similar 5 church is cruciform 5 church was dedicated 5 style is perpendicular 4 _ have _ 4 church is not 4 church is now 4 church was not 4 church was now 4 church was then 4 walls are usually 4 window is perpendicular 4 windows are later 3 _ are extremely 3 _ do _ 3 _ is good 3 _ is perpendicular 3 _ is so 3 aisles are late 3 arch is round 3 building is still 3 building was so 3 chapel is not 3 church is generally 3 church was entirely 3 church was originally 3 churches are usually 3 churches were not 3 end is modern 3 plan is cruciform 3 style did not 3 style is evident 3 tower was originally 3 wall is entirely 3 walls are norman 3 walls are not 3 window is very 3 windows are perpendicular Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ had no doubt 1 aisles were not merely 1 arch is no real 1 arches are not semicircular 1 arches are not stilted 1 arches were no doubt 1 building is not immediately 1 building was not originally 1 building was not roman 1 buildings is not so 1 century had no cause 1 chapel is not original 1 chapels are not uncommon 1 church are not all 1 church had no gynecaeum 1 church had no need 1 church had no sooner 1 church is not fully 1 church is not yet 1 churches are not uncommon 1 churches did not greatly 1 churches do not usually 1 churches is no argument 1 churches was not arbitrary 1 churches was not infrequent 1 churches were not necessarily 1 churches were not widely 1 churches were not yet 1 man was not short 1 nave are not quite 1 north has no such 1 sides had no colour 1 sides was not great 1 style was not complete 1 time is not far 1 times is not evident 1 tower formed no part 1 tower is not merely 1 tower was not so 1 towers are not unfrequently 1 towers formed no part 1 wall was not part 1 walls are not only 1 walls are not parallel 1 walls are not perpendicular 1 windows are not very 1 windows is no indication 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 = 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 = 43319 author = Durand, Guillaume title = The Symbolism of Churches and Church Ornaments A Translation of the First Book of the Rationale Divinorum Officiorum date = keywords = Bishop; Blessed; Cambridge; Catholic; Christ; Church; Cross; Durandus; Father; Footnote; Ghost; God; Holy; Jerusalem; Jews; John; King; Lord; Mass; Matthew; Moses; Norman; Passion; Pope; Prophet; Saviour; Society; Solomon; Spirit; Thou; Trinity; altar; apostle; christian; greek summary = as cited by Buscemi, [Footnote 34] who also mentions a Cross church church, represent (as we shall presently observe that Norman symbolism one mind in an house.'' [Footnote 119]For as the material church is the form of a circle: [Footnote 149] to signify that the Church hath [Footnote 149: This of course refers to the Church of the Holy The chancel, that is, the head of the church, being lower [Footnote [Footnote 176] ''Or the light in a church may denote the apostles and I. The altar hath a place in the church on three accounts, as shall be [Footnote 201] But the lower altar is the Church Militant, of which it [Footnote 416] of the altar seven times with holy water, by means of [Footnote 419] But after that the consecration of the church or of the Apostle) ''the Head of the Church, which is also His body''; [Footnote id = 22943 author = Falkner, John Meade title = The Nebuly Coat date = keywords = Anastasia; Bellevue; Bishop; Blandamer; Canon; Carisbury; Cullerne; Euphemia; Farquhar; George; God; Janaway; Joliffe; Lodge; London; Lord; Martin; Miss; Mrs; Parkyn; Rector; Saint; Sharnall; Sir; Sophia; Westray; Wydcombe; good; look; man summary = After Westray had set out for the church, Anastasia Joliffe went back to "But Martin''s time was come; he died that very night, and Miss Joliffe "I don''t know," Westray said; "it looks to me as if the picture was with Miss Joliffe, so long as she was talking of Lord Blandamer. at her Saturday meeting, but Anastasia told Westray that Lord Blandamer Lord Blandamer wished Westray good-night at the church-door, excusing Westray knew, that Lord Blandamer had come to Bellevue Lodge without at "Yes," said the would-be indifferent Westray; "where did Lord Blandamer Miss Joliffe would have said that she knew Anastasia''s mind so well that "It is very good of you, Miss Joliffe," Westray said; "it is very kind "Yes," Westray said, and Lord Blandamer gave them back to him without a "There is a man come over from Cullerne, my lord," he said. "Where is Mr Westray?" Lord Blandamer said. id = 29077 author = George, Walter S. title = Byzantine Churches in Constantinople: Their History and Architecture date = keywords = Andrew; Andronicus; Chora; Church; Constantine; Constantinople; Emperor; FIG; Greek; Holy; Ibid; Irene; John; Justinian; LOOKING; Manuel; Mary; Mesjedi; Michael; Mr.; NORTH; PLATE; Pammakaristos; Pantokrator; Patriarch; SAVIOUR; Sophia; Studion; Sultan; Theodore; Theodosia; byzantine; illustration; south; turkish summary = (2) The Western Dome Arch in the South Church 128 (2) Arch in the North Wall of the South Church, (2) Arch in the North Wall of the South Church, walls the building is a domed cross church; if the galleries are The building is, in fact, a domed cross church with no gallery in The typical late Byzantine church is a development from the domed cross city the Greek community still spoke of the building as the church of Sophia.[133] The bricks bearing the mark ''the Great Church,'' [Greek: Constantinople and connects it more closely with the domed-cross church. central part of the north church are evidently formed by building the wall of the original south church, whose eastern chapels were then with the narthex of the north church, while a door in the eastern wall door to the church shows a building with a central dome, a narthex building in the Greek Church. id = 30290 author = Heath, Sidney title = Our Homeland Churches and How to Study Them date = keywords = Cathedral; Church; England; English; Map; Mary; Norman; Oxford; Perpendicular; Saint; Saxon; christian; early; gothic; illustration summary = _Norman and Early English Doorways, Dunstable Priory Church_ 45 _A Late Decorated Window in a Parish Church, East Sutton_ 59 _Leighton Buzzard Church, with Early English Tower and Spire_ 102 It is a well-known fact that the chancel and nave of a church generally was formerly placed outside the church, in a separate building called The reason in early days for placing the font outside the church was Eastern churches in this style usually took the form of the Greek cross, Our best examples containing Saxon work are possibly the churches at church, however, the windows have the semi-circular arch. The Norman style of church architecture with its varied forms of The towers of Norman churches often show windows of two lights separated Church, London, to which was added at a later period, a beautiful Early [Illustration: A Late Decorated Window in a Parish Church. architectural church ornament usually placed upon the id = 29759 author = Slater, John title = Architecture: Classic and Early Christian date = keywords = A.D.; ARCHITECTURE; B.C.; CAPITAL; CHAPTER; Egypt; FIG; Rome; TEMPLE; building; christian; church; column; doric; egyptian; greek; illustration; plan; roman; romanesque summary = works of the great building nations of Antiquity and the Early The features, ornaments, and even forms of ancient buildings differed (2) walls, (3) roof, (4) openings, (5) columns, and (6) ornaments, and lofty central row of columns generally had capitals of the form shown the Egyptian buildings show many curious forms of columns (Fig. 28), planning of buildings, their height, and the details of the columns. buildings, besides forming their chief means of decorating small One other feature was employed in Greek temple-architecture. The most famous Greek building which was erected in the Ionic style much Roman as Greek, and is hardly found in any of the great temples lines of columns which form the main features of the building. forms of column and capital existing in Egypt, the Greeks, however, Greeks, formed the chief characteristic of Roman architecture. Roman buildings which includes such forms of temples as that at id = 33837 author = Smith, T. Roger (Thomas Roger) title = Architecture: Gothic and Renaissance date = keywords = Architect; CATHEDRAL; England; English; FIG; France; Italy; Palace; Renaissance; St.; building; century; french; german; gothic; illustration; italian summary = windows, doors, and other features in Gothic buildings. the military and domestic buildings of the Gothic period (Fig. 7). secular building which exists of Gothic architecture. the planning of English Gothic buildings of all periods. The walls of Gothic buildings are generally of stone; brick being the great Gothic church, except the general use of the pointed arch. States of the Church), in which the best Gothic buildings are to be The constructive arches in Italian Gothic buildings are, as a rule, a building material in Italy during the Gothic period, than in other The design of Italian Gothic buildings presents many peculiarities, Gothic building; with the result that if the great governing feature exception, with all large Gothic buildings), the architect, while buildings designed and built in the new style, possess great interest. many of these churches and other buildings, a beautiful ornament, id = 27102 author = Thompson, A. Hamilton (Alexander Hamilton) title = The Ground Plan of the English Parish Church date = keywords = Mary; Northants; Saxon; Yorks; aisle; church; nave; plan summary = Variations of the plan with aisled nave and chancel 126 the nave and western porch of an early Saxon church, which is generally between tower and nave is, like the chancel arch at Escomb, entirely north and south; (2) a broad nave, divided from the aisles by arches, length of the nave remains unbroken from west wall to chancel arch: no the aisleless plan with rectangular chancel and western tower. nave with a long aisleless chancel, western tower, and south porch. this fine twelfth century aisleless church a north aisle was added in a line with the tower arch and west wall of the south aisle. Plan of 13th century church: west tower, south church by adding north and south chapels to the nave was pursued plan, with aisles to nave and chancel. the present nave, north aisle, chancel, and west tower, were added. id = 56331 author = Thompson, A. Hamilton (Alexander Hamilton) title = The Historical Growth of the English Parish Church date = keywords = Devon; England; Holy; Lincs; Mary; Norfolk; Northants; Saxon; Trinity; Yorks; Yorkshire; church summary = chantry priests at the altars of churches, which had a powerful effect THE CHANTRY CHAPEL IN THE PARISH CHURCH THE CHANTRY CHAPEL IN THE PARISH CHURCH chantries of more than one priest founded merely in parish churches. The chancel, the aisles of the nave, the great porches, the west tower ''south arch'' of the parish church at Wakefield: in 1478 the chantry of There are stone chantry chapels in the north and south arches of the position of chantry chapels often invests the churches of the west of themselves at the east end of the church, the Trinity chapel forming a south chancel chapel built, the east wall of which interfered with churches of north-west Yorkshire, from the end of the twelfth century in the church, probably at the high altar of the rebuilt chancel, in a window, usually in the south wall of the chancel, and near its west