PREFACE
The
scopeofthisbookrequiresawordofexplanation,
sincefromaverysimple purpioseithasdeveloped
to
a
rathercomplicated issue. Myintention hadbeen
toformulatethe chief principles of classical design
inarchitecture. Isoonrealised thatinthe
present
stateofourthoughtnotheoryofartcouldbemade
convincing,orevenclear,toanyonenotalreadyper-
suadedofitstruth. Theremay,atthepresenttime,
bealack ofarchitectural taste: thereis, unfortu-
ately, no lack of architectural
opinion.
Architec-
ture,itissaid,mustbe
'
expressiveofitspurpose
.'
or
'expressiveofits true
construction,' or 'expressive
ofthe materials it employs' or
'
expressive of
the
national
life' (whethernoble or otherwise) or
'
ex-
pressiveofanoblelife'
(whethernationalornot)
;
or
expressive
ofthe craftsman's temperament,
or the
owner's or the architect's,
or, on the contrary,
'
academic'andstudiously
indifferenttothesefactors.
Itmust,we
are told,besymmetrical,orit
must
be
picturesque
—
^thatis,above
allthings,unsymmetrical.
It must be
'
traditional' and
'
scholarly,' that is,
resemblingwhat
has already been done by
Greek,