THE ETHICAL
FALLACY
135
passing
totheirinnocent
tasksthroughthecourtsof
Hawkesmooror
ofWren,were startled
torecognise
the
Abomination ofDesolation
standing, previously
unnoticed, inthe
place whereit ought
not. Anda
criticism
which would be willing
—
^were they pro-
pitious
—
^to prove a point
of theory by citing the
measurements
ofthe Ark, must nowseem
obsolete
enough.
Butifthetheological
argumenthasceased
to be effective, its
interest for the study of taste
remains immense.
And the fact that,
a hundred
years after Voltaire, one of the
foremost men of
lettersin
Europeshouldhavelookedforarchitectural
guidancein the BookofLamentationsis
onewhich
maywellcontinuetodelightthe
curiosityofanthro-
pologists when the problems ofaesthetichave been
rejectedasunfruitful,orabandoned
assolved.
II
More persuasive than
the theological prejudice,
andmorepermanent,isthepolitical. If,aswehave
said, the romantic fallacy reduced taste to amere
echoofcontemporaryidealism,ifitencouragedmen
tolookinartalwaysforareflectionoftheirexisting
dreams, what must be the verdict on Renaissance
architectureofan age whoseidealism was political
andwhosepoliticalidealwasdemocracy? Forhere
wasanarchitecturerootedinaristocracy,dependent
on the veryorganisation against which society
was