178
THE ARCHITECTURE OF HUMANISM
sofarasthey havepurposes in
common. Weshall
compare them with regard to their command of
architectural space
and logical coherence,and here,
no doubt, Brunelleschi is tentative
and
immature.
Butthat doesnot exhausthisindividuality: these
qualities
were
nothis totalaim. The more stress,
then, that we layon the sequence the less justice
shall wedotoquattrocentoarchitecture. Thehabit
ofregardingBrunelleschisimplyas Bramante's
pre-
cursorlongallowedhis geniustoremain inshadow.
Notsoverylongagotheassertionofhisindependent
rights,hisunrepeatedmerit,wasreceivedasapara-
dox. Hecamefirstinalongsequence,and
'
without
experience
'
;
how
couldhe,therefore,besupremely
great?
The evolutionary criticism which belittled
the
period of Brunelleschi
—and from the same uncon-
sciousmotive—wassomethingmore
thanjusttothe
periodofBramante
: the
'
primeandclimax
'
ofour
architecture's
life. Noble asit wasinthehandsof
itsfinest architects, thecentral
styleofthe Renais-
sancehad,nonethe
less,itsvice. Itistooterrified
lest itshould offend. Bramante, Raphael, Peruzzi,
speakashavingauthority
;
but
the stylespeaksas
thescribes. Astylehasthe
righttobejudgedatits
highest
inspiration,
yet,tobefully
understood,
must
bewatchedatitscommontask.
Atmoments
—
^but
atmomentshowinfrequent
!—
^thisarchitecturemakes