THE ETHICAL FALLACY
137
inertia,andthehypocrisyofadeadconvention. It
promisednothing,and inthe commercialmonotony
ofthetimethejoythathadbeeninithaddiedout.
*
ThebaseRenaissancearchitectsofVenice,'remarks
Ruskin bitterly,
'
liked
masquing and fiddling, so
theycoveredtheirworkwithcomicmasksandmusical
instruments.
Eventhatwas
betterthanourEnglish
wayoflikingnothingandprofessingtolike
triglyphs.'
*
Agloomystyle,then
;
averitableBastilleofoppres-
sivememories
;
astyletobecast
downandthedust
ofitshaken
'
fromourfeetforever.'
On
itsconstructivesidethe new
criticism wasno
lessflatteringtoademocraticsentiment. It
setout
toestablish, anddelighted its public by providing,
a
'
universalandconclusivelaw
ofright
'
thatshould
be
'
easilyapplicabletoallpossible
architecturalin-
ventionsofthehumanmind
'
; andthisinthe
*
full
belief'thatin these matters
'
menareintendedwith-
outexcessivedifficultytoknowgoodthings
frombad.'
Good
andbad,
infact,weretobeasgailydistinguish-
ableinarchitectureastheynotoriously
areinconduct.
And
the
same criterion should doservice forboth.
Becauseaknowledge ofthe
Orders, which wasthe
basisofarchitecturaltraining,isnot,of
itself,apass-
porteithertoarchitectural tasteor
practice, itwas
argued
that
training assuch was corrupting.
The
exactitudesof taste, the
trained and organiseddis-
- TheStones
of
Venice,
vol.i.chap.ii.
p.13.