86 THE
ARCHITECTURE OF
HUMANISM
itself. Thetwo
wereblendedinthe
Baroque. Itis
nottheleastamong
theparadoxesofthat
profoundly
greatstylethatitpossesses,in
completeaccord,these
contrary elements. To give the
picturesque
its
grandestscope,
andyettosubdueittoarchitectural
law—this was the baroque
experiment and it
is
achieved.'The baroqueisnot
afraid tostartle
and
arrest. Like Nature, it is fantastic, unexpected,
varied and grotesque. It is allthis in the highest
degree. But, unlike Nature,
it remains subject
rigidly to the laws of scale and composition
.|
It
enlarged their scope, but would not modify their
stringency. It is not, therefore, in any true sense
accidental, irregular, or wild. It makes—^for the
parallelisexact
—
a.morevarioususeofdiscordsand
suspensions,anditstandsin
a
closelysimilarrelation
tothesimplerandmorestaticstylewhichpreceded
'^it,asthelatermusictotheearlier.
vA.t
enlargedthe
classicformulabydevelopingwithinittheprinciple
of movement. But the movement is logical. For
baroquearchitectureis
always^logical: itis
logical
as an aesthetic construction, even where it most
neglects the
logic of material construction. It
in-
sistedoncoherent
purpose,anditsgreatestextrava-
'
Iamspeakingthroughoutofbaroquearchitectureatitsbest.
Naturally,in
somecasesthereischarlatanism,oranignorantattempt,
to
imitate
theformswithoutperceivingthetheoryoftheart. But
theessenceofthe
modern
'
picturesque'tasteinarchitectureisits
absenceoftheory,
itsinsistenceonthecasual.