176 THEARCHITECTURE OF HUMANISM
truethatoflateyearsaslightlymoreworthyapprecia-
tionofthebaroquestyle—
^it
wouldbetruertocall
it
amitigationofabusethananappreciation
—^has
crept
fromGerman into English criticism. Butthe new,
lessvivid,coloursgrestillwovenontheoldpattern.
Immaturity,prime,and
decay
followone
anotherin
predestinedsequence. Architectureisstillpresented
tousasanorganismwithalifeofitsown,subject
to
theclockworkofinevitablefate. After
Brunelleschi
the
herald,and Bramantethe achiever, must come
Berniniandthefall.
Let us
retracethe
biologic myth.
Theperiodof
Brunelleschi is tentative and immature—unskilled,
butcharming. Thisis true,inasense, but
already
it
isnotexactlytrue.
Itasksustoregard Brunel-
leschi's architecture as a less adept solution of
Bramante'sproblem. Itpresentshimasstruggling
withimperfectinstrumentsafteranideal
whichlater
was
fulfilled.
Weareboundtoseehisarchitecture
inthislightifourthoughtsareonthesequence. In
relationtothesequence,thedescriptionmay
be
just.
Butthispreciselywasthefallacy
ofevolution. The
valuesof artdonot liein the sequencebutinthe
individual terms. To Brunelleschi
there was no
Bramante
;
his architecture
was not Bramante's
unachieved, buthis own fulfilled. His purpose led
tothepurposeofBramante
: theywerenotonthat
account the same.
There is in the architecture of