THE ETHICAL
FALLACY
151
Ihough
it is nobler in restraint,
f
But thestrength
of thebaroqueis adeceit. It 'proteststoo much,'
andfor
the usualreason: thatitsboastisinsecure.
Itsmassisalltooprobablylesshuge,itsvistasless
prolonged,itsrichnessless
precious,thanitpretends.
Thechargeoffalseconstruction,asconstruction,has,
it
is true, been dealt
with; the argument
from
science fell, as wesaw,to nothing. Butthisis an
argument ofmoral taste. Can weapprove a style
thus
saturatedwithdeceit
: astyleof
false
facades,
false perspectives, false masonry and false gold?
For
allthese, it must be agreed, are found in the
baroque
as
they
arefoundinno
otherstyle
ofarchi-
tecture. Itisanart,notindeedalways,butfartoo
_often,
of
'
deceit.'
Thisisprobablythe
commonest
ofallthe
prejudices
againsttheRenaissancestyleinitsfulldevelopment.
Buthere, too, the
factsare sounder thanthe con-
clusions.
Theharmfulnessofdeceitlies,itmustbesupposed,
eitherasa
qualityinthe willofthedeceiver, orin
thedamageinflictedbythe
deceit.
If,
indischarge
ofadebt,a
manweretogivemeinsteadofasove-
reignagilded
farthing,hewouldfail,nodoubt,ofhis
promise,whichwas togiveme thevalueoftwenty
shillings. To
deceivemewasesisentialtohisplanand
thedesire todoso
impliedinhisattempt. Butif,
whenIhave
lenthimnothing,heweretogive
me
a