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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 11 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 44879 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 74 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 Normandy 6 great 6 french 6 France 6 England 5 William 5 Rouen 5 Paris 5 Caen 4 illustration 4 church 4 St. 4 Henry 4 English 3 old 3 Pont 3 Norman 3 Mont 3 Michel 2 town 2 place 2 little 2 history 2 english 2 day 2 century 2 Richard 2 Pierre 2 Monsieur 2 Madame 2 Louis 2 LETTER 2 Evreux 2 Duke 2 Dieu 2 Conqueror 2 Bayeux 1 woman 1 tower 1 street 1 sable 1 parisian 1 look 1 like 1 good 1 eye 1 chapter 1 Yvonne 1 Vitalis 1 Virgin Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 932 church 807 time 706 town 628 day 590 house 588 century 548 place 540 man 539 year 512 building 474 side 441 part 434 wall 433 tower 396 way 388 window 382 stone 376 work 375 eye 368 hand 366 one 356 street 339 country 338 road 333 sea 332 woman 322 foot 321 village 312 life 296 castle 287 name 269 door 261 head 249 figure 241 view 238 line 235 hill 231 city 227 nothing 225 end 223 people 223 night 223 cathedral 216 tree 215 room 211 roof 209 arch 206 history 206 child 201 voice Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 4787 _ 726 de 581 St. 493 Rouen 428 Normandy 394 Norman 386 France 320 Caen 297 St 276 la 256 William 239 England 231 le 221 et 214 Monsieur 213 Paris 208 Madame 197 Bayeux 175 Henry 169 du 151 Pont 142 Mont 134 Pierre 131 English 124 Dieppe 122 Lisieux 121 Conqueror 121 CHAPTER 108 Duke 107 Le 100 Tanrade 100 La 98 Suzette 97 M. 95 Evreux 94 Falaise 93 French 92 des 92 I. 91 Richard 91 Dieu 90 Louis 88 Michel 85 Alice 82 Ouen 81 Robert 80 Havre 79 Seine 78 King 76 Footnote Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4344 it 2394 he 2222 i 1863 we 1572 they 1353 you 1023 she 753 them 621 him 594 us 484 me 296 her 273 one 205 himself 170 itself 150 themselves 69 myself 54 ourselves 52 herself 20 mine 12 yourself 8 yours 8 thee 8 his 5 ours 5 hers 4 theirs 3 oneself 2 yourselves 2 ya 1 you''ll 1 yet?--we''ll 1 them:-- 1 shrilly--"jacques!--_attends 1 qui 1 question.--below 1 non 1 monsieur 1 meâ 1 gosse 1 fingers--"they 1 d''ici 1 children--_toujours 1 \against Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 17066 be 4964 have 1065 see 901 do 760 make 657 come 539 go 532 take 523 find 497 give 494 know 466 say 387 seem 364 pass 363 stand 359 appear 350 look 296 build 284 leave 271 call 261 follow 250 become 246 turn 234 tell 221 bring 216 lie 204 hold 201 rise 200 keep 197 remain 190 add 187 lead 186 run 183 hear 174 begin 169 think 166 form 160 contain 159 bear 157 fill 155 continue 153 carry 151 get 146 cover 145 enter 143 speak 143 lose 141 fall 136 use 136 show Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1847 not 936 great 904 so 871 more 806 old 758 little 689 only 664 now 636 most 594 other 573 still 572 up 572 as 570 out 569 very 547 then 536 good 528 well 504 long 477 here 470 much 434 even 406 many 403 also 375 same 357 first 320 high 307 such 301 down 299 almost 292 own 290 small 286 french 286 early 279 however 272 last 264 again 257 there 248 once 241 too 237 low 234 few 228 open 223 large 221 far 220 fine 219 present 210 just 206 back 199 full Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 146 most 119 good 99 least 42 early 37 high 27 fine 24 great 16 slight 16 old 16 bad 15 late 14 large 14 Most 13 near 12 rich 10 small 9 pure 9 low 8 eld 7 quaint 7 noble 6 lovely 5 simple 5 dull 4 young 4 c'' 3 soft 3 poor 3 lively 3 handsome 3 gay 3 dear 3 brave 2 wise 2 warm 2 topmost 2 tiny 2 thin 2 tall 2 strong 2 strange 2 steep 2 statesmanlike 2 plain 2 mean 2 manif 2 lines:-- 2 lazy 2 happy 2 grave Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 490 most 18 well 18 least 1 wisest 1 richest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 gallica.bnf.fr 2 www.gutenberg.net 2 dp.rastko.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 2 http://gallica.bnf.fr 2 http://dp.rastko.net 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/8/0/8/18080/18080-h/18080-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/8/0/8/18080/18080-h.zip 1 http://gallica.bnf.fr/ Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 one is not 4 buildings are now 4 one does not 3 _ is _ 3 _ was _ 3 church is more 3 church was actually 3 normandy was only 3 place is now 3 town is famous 2 _ are so 2 _ is about 2 _ were only 2 building is angular 2 building is now 2 building is subsequent 2 building made more 2 building was completely 2 buildings are still 2 church built right 2 church has still 2 church is dark 2 church is generally 2 church is now 2 church is particularly 2 church is really 2 church is right 2 church is so 2 church is somewhat 2 church is very 2 church seem strangely 2 church was not 2 church was soon 2 church went on 2 churches are often 2 churches is easily 2 day is almost 2 day is brilliantly 2 days is much 2 de rose _ 2 house built right 2 house stands out 2 houses are astonishingly 2 houses are bare 2 houses are better 2 houses are charmingly 2 norman was often 2 normandy are not 2 normandy came out 2 normandy does not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 normandy had not long 2 one has no time 2 one is not surprised 2 place held no fewer 2 street does not always 2 walls were not as 1 day was no longer 1 days are not always 1 france has not yet 1 man is not so 1 norman is no norman 1 normandy was not _ 1 one has no longer 1 one has not much 1 streets are not gay 1 time is no longer 1 tower is not devoid 1 town had no existence 1 towns are not liable 1 towns were not easy 1 walls tell no tales 1 windows have no mouldings 1 works are not often 1 works were no longer A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 18080 author = Blackburn, Henry title = Normandy Picturesque date = keywords = Audemer; Bayeux; Caen; Conqueror; England; France; London; Mortain; Normandy; Paris; Pont; Rouen; St.; Trouville; William; day; english; french; illustration; old; place; town summary = The descriptions of places and buildings in Normandy call for little or little town of PONT AUDEMER, with its quaint old gables, its galleries, and streets of time-worn buildings--centuries old. passing visit to Pont l''Evêque, another old town a few miles distant. The quiet contemplation of the old buildings in such towns as Pont old covered market-place, and the extent of the boundaries of the town, The approach to the town of Bayeux from the west, either by the old road century; we see the great Gothic hall of the Knights of Mont St. Michael, with its carved stone-work and lofty roof, supported by three town, as at Falaise, growing round its feet; also an old church at the busy, modern town; if its old houses and streets are being swept away, The watering-places of Normandy are so well known to English people that the best old work from view; and one whole street of wooden houses id = 7961 author = Dodd, Anna Bowman title = In and out of Three Normandy Inns date = keywords = CHAPTER; Caen; Charm; Coutances; Dieu; France; Frenchman; Honfleur; Madame; Michel; Monsieur; Mont; Norman; Normandy; Paris; Paul; Renard; St.; Sévigné; Villerville; day; eye; french; great; like; little; look; old; parisian; street; woman summary = To this little company of Norman men and women, you will, I know, facing the sea--a new and old world of fashion in capes and other "They''re not--they only look old," replied Renard, stopping a moment to a long moment of scrutiny, his eyes following the lean, stately figure shrewd kindly old face came a light that touched it all at once with a little door opened directly on the road, and on the curé''s house. the long day''s drive in the open air, her appetite for blowing roses of three ladies of the court having to pass the night in a rude little voice Madame de Sévigné again turned, with the same charming smile and green of the high roads; for even in the old days there was a great peasant women''s faces, as the bent figures staggered beneath a young and fields, as in the old days the great city walls and the cathedral id = 28959 author = Home, Gordon title = The Illustrated Works of Gordon Home: A Linked Index to the Project Gutenberg Editions date = keywords = Church; Pickering; chapter summary = CHAPTER III Concerning Rouen, the Ancient Capital of Normandy CHAPTER IV Concerning the Cathedral City of Evreux and the Road to Bernay CHAPTER V Concerning Lisieux and the Romantic Town of Falaise CHAPTER VII Concerning Mont St Michel THE CHURCH AT GISORS, SEEN FROM THE WALLS OF THE NORMAN CASTLE left of the railway the little Norman Church of Notre-Dame-sur-l''Eau. THE CLOCK GATE, VIRE CHAPTER I��ACROSS THE MOORS FROM PICKERING TO WHITBY CHAPTER IX��FROM PICKERING TO RIEVAULX ABBEY THE FOREST AND VALE OF PICKERING IN PALAEOLITHIC AND PRE-GLACIAL TIMES HOW THE ROMAN OCCUPATION OF BRITAIN AFFECTED THE FOREST AND VALE OF PICKERING, B.C. 55 TO A.D. 418 THE FOREST AND VALE IN NORMAN TIMES, A.D. 1066 TO 1154 Concerning the Villages and Scenery of the Forest and Vale of Pickering South Side of the Nave of Pickering Church Wall Paintings in Pickering Church Font at Pickering Church id = 8505 author = Home, Gordon title = Normandy, Illustrated, Complete date = keywords = Caen; England; English; France; Henry; Hotel; Michel; Mont; Normandy; Pierre; Rouen; William; century; church; french; great summary = THE CHURCH AT GISORS, SEEN FROM THE WALLS OF THE NORMAN CASTLE THE GREAT WESTERN TOWERS OF THE CHURCH OF NOTRE DAME AT ST LO extraordinary church tower that stands in the market-place quite detached This splendid Norman building is the church of the Abbey built in as a town whose church is more crowded with elaborately carved stone-work the Place stands the beautiful town belfry built at the end of the Beyond the bridge appear some quaint red roofs with one tower-like house becomes much wider and forms a small Place, is a beautiful old building At the eastern side of the town stands St Croix, a fifteenth century church of the great church of St Germain that dominate the town where Henry II. new church with the two great western towers only carried up to half the Great stone castles were beginning to appear at all the chief places in id = 8593 author = Home, Gordon title = Normandy, Illustrated, Part 1 date = keywords = England; Normandy; Rouen; century; english; great; tower summary = THE CHURCH AT GISORS, SEEN FROM THE WALLS OF THE NORMAN CASTLE On the steep hill beyond stands the ruined abbey church. THE GREAT WESTERN TOWERS OF THE CHURCH OF NOTRE DAME AT ST LO extraordinary church tower that stands in the market-place quite detached Tancarville Castle whose walls enclose an eighteenth century chateau. The great castle was built by William the Norman, and it was here that he by the great tower of the parish church as well as by the ruins of the This splendid Norman building is the church of the Abbey built in as a town whose church is more crowded with elaborately carved stone-work the Seine there stands the great and historic Chateau-Gaillard that towers castle that towers upon its hill right in the middle of the town. century a shrine to his memory had been placed outside the walls of Rouen. id = 8594 author = Home, Gordon title = Normandy, Illustrated, Part 2 date = keywords = Evreux; Henry; Norman; Normandy; church; great; town summary = over the old town of Evreux as we pass along the cobbled streets. Leaving the Place Parvis by the Rue de l''Horloge you come to the great open the Place stands the beautiful town belfry built at the end of the hamlet with a quaint little church built right upon the roadway with no Beyond the bridge appear some quaint red roofs with one tower-like house becomes much wider and forms a small Place, is a beautiful old building At the eastern side of the town stands St Croix, a fifteenth century church place in such grand old towns as Lisieux in medieval days. The wide and sunny Place Thiers is dominated by the great church of St a close view of the great Tour Talbot, and then pass through a small of the great church of St Germain that dominate the town where Henry II. id = 8595 author = Home, Gordon title = Normandy, Illustrated, Part 3 date = keywords = Caen; England; English; France; Michel; Mont; Normandy; William; french; great summary = narrow little street is flanked by many an old house that has seen most of the early times when Mont St Michel was a bare rock; when it was not even see the rock as it may be seen to-day, although at that time it was crowned commence the building of an abbey, and the unique position of the rock soon groupings of the old houses with their time-worn stone walls, over which The great square tower with its round-headed Norman windows, is crowned height you have reached, St Lo, dominated by its great church, appears on a spend one''s whole time in the great church of the Abbaye aux Hommes, and he was building the great abbey to appease the wrath of the church. church towers seen from the canal as it goes out of the town towards the The great Norman church is so id = 26678 author = Smith, F. Berkeley (Frank Berkeley) title = A Village of Vagabonds date = keywords = Alice; Baron; Bréville; Curé; Dieu; Garron; Julie; Madame; Marianne; Monsieur; Paris; Pierre; Pont; Savignac; Suzette; Tanrade; Yvonne; good; illustration; little; old; sable summary = Shall I tell you who is coming to dine to-night, Green-eyes? since early morning, summoning this good little Norman maid-of-all-work for the gray-haired old sea-dog in front of me cocked his blue eye to one moment and giving an old comrade like myself a platonic little pat He left the village the next day at noon by the toy train, "the little "It is not the same without Monsieur Tanrade," Suzette sighed to-day as "Monsieur Tanrade will come," returned the curé, "if you go to sleep not be Monsieur le Curé''s friend if you were not a good shot. knew Monsieur le Curé was snug in his duck-blind for the night, a long "I''d like a little rain myself," said I, reaching for a chair--"I have a My good friend the mayor of Pont du Sable has just handed me my They came to me," he went on, turning to Alice, "little id = 12537 author = Turner, Dawson title = Account of a Tour in Normandy, Volume 1 date = keywords = Archbishop; Arques; Caux; Dieppe; Duke; England; English; France; Fécamp; Harfleur; Havre; Henry; Histoire; King; LETTER; Louis; Normandie; Normandy; Paris; Pays; Richard; Romain; Rouen; Seine; St.; Virgin; William; church; french; great; history; illustration; place summary = Plate 11 Sculpture, supposed Roman, in the Church of St. Paul, at Rouen. Plate 12 Circular Tower, attached to the Church of St. Ouen, at Rouen. Plate 18 Tower of the Church of St. Ouen, at Rouen. DIEPPE--CASTLE--CHURCHES--HISTORY OF THE PLACE--FEAST OF THE ASSUMPTION. DIEPPE--CASTLE--CHURCHES--HISTORY OF THE PLACE--FEAST OF THE ASSUMPTION. St. Ouen, Bishop of Rouen, dedicated the church in the presence of King good sportsman may, at the present time, between Dieppe and Rouen kill Rouen, at present, holds the fifth place among the towns; though it was [Illustration: Sculpture, supposed Roman, in the Church of St. Paul, at Rouen ] [Illustration: Circular Tower, attached to the Church of St. Ouen, at Rouen] The first church at Rouen was built about the year 270: three hundred [Illustration: Tower of the Church of St. Ouen, at Rouen] [Illustration: Head of Christ, in the Church of St. Ouen, at Rouen, seen in front] id = 12538 author = Turner, Dawson title = Account of a Tour in Normandy, Volume 2 date = keywords = Abbé; Andelys; Bayeux; Bec; Caen; Charles; Château; Conqueror; Duke; England; English; Evreux; Falaise; Footnote; France; Georges; Henry; Ist; John; Jumieges; LETTER; Lisieux; Louis; Mr.; Norman; Normandy; Ordericus; Paris; Peter; Philip; Pont; Richard; Robert; Rouen; St.; Stephen; Vitalis; William; church; french; history; illustration summary = Plate 41 Tower of St. John''s Church, at Caen building at least of equal antiquity with the great church. [Illustration: Ancient trefoil-headed Arches in Abbey of Jumieges] the archbishop''s signet.--A crypt, the original burial place of St. Taurinus, is still shewn in the church, and it continues to be the churches of great antiquity, it is not built in the form of a cross, but We visited only one other of the churches in Lisieux, that of St. Jacques, a large edifice, in a bad style of pointed architecture, and FRENCH POLICE--RIDE FROM LISIEUX TO CAEN--CIDER--GENERAL APPEARANCE AND FRENCH POLICE--RIDE FROM LISIEUX TO CAEN--CIDER--GENERAL APPEARANCE AND [Illustration: Tower and Spire of St. Peter''s Church, at Caen] [Illustration: Sculpture upon a Capital in St. Peter''s Church at Caen] [Illustration: Tower of St. John''s Church, at Caen] _Trinity Holy, church of the abbey of the_, at Caen, now a work-house,