156 THE
ARCHITECTURE OF
HUMANISM
creativeasthe
seventeenthcentury,wasawideone
;
its influence was felt through
everything that
was
made.
The gaiety of life, no less than its solemn
permanency,
sought architectural expression. And
the baroque style—the
pre-eminent style of
the
pleasure-house, ofthe garden
—
^wasableto minister
to
this gaiety. The aesthetic pleasure of surprise
maybealowoneinthescale; butit
is
genuine,and
notnecessarilyignoble. Andthesameistrueofthe
mere perception ofdexterity. To obtain these,
on
their appropriate occasions, the thousand devices
of baroque deceit were invaluable. Humorous
or
triflingin
themselves,
theygainedanaestheticinterest
anddignitybecausetheunityofbaroquestyleallied
them
toageneral
scheme.
Besidestheseingenuitiesofthecasino,thegrotto,
andthe garden,therewere architectural
opportuni-
ties of a frankly temporary sort. There was the
architectureofthe
festa,
ofthepageant,ofthetheatre.
Therewasnoreasonwhythisshouldnot
beserious,
supremelyimaginative, orcuriouslybeautiful. But
itwasnotrequiredtobe,orseem,
permanent. There
washerenoperilofthat
disappointment,whichpre-
tenceinvolves, tothe justexpectations weform of
monumentalart. Andtheseoccasions,
forwhichthe
baroquestyle remains
unequalled,were an endless
opportunityforarchitecturalexperiment.
Theywere
theschoolinwhichits
psychologicskillwastrained.