THE
BIOLOGICAL
FALLACY
175
rigid,
and
inert. Simplicity
becomesbarren, and a
restrainedtaste,vacant.
Andastheenddrawsnear
this vacancy is set
in all finality on
architecture's
featuresbytheEmpirestyle.
TheRenaissancedies,
its thoughts held
fixed, by a kind of wandering
memory, uponthe classicpastwhence itarose,
and
which, initslastdelusion,it
believesitself tohave
become.
Suchisthethemewhich,in
theirseveralmanners,
ourhistories
repeat.
But
isitnottoogood,alittle,
to be true? Isit not a little like thosestories of
Herodotus that reveal
too
plainly
the propensity
of
myth? Thisperfect imageofthe lifeofman
—
whyshouldwelooktofinditinthehistoryofarchi-
tecture?
This
sequence of three terms
—
growth,
maturity,decay—^isthesequenceoflifeasweseeit
intheorganicworld,andasweknowitin
ourselves.
Toreadthe events ofhistory andthe problemsof
inanimate fact in the terms of our own life, is
a
natural
habit as old as thought
itself.
These are
obvious metaphors, and literature, which has em-
ployedthemfromthebeginning,willnotforegotheir
use.
It isby words like these that the
changes
of
the world will alwaysbe described. But, at least,
itmight
bewellto
makecertainthatthedescription
fitsthefacts. Thecriticismofarchitecture,
withthe
solemn
terminologyof
evolution,nowtoooftenforces
thefacts tofit thispreconceived
description. It is