4
THE
ARCHITECTURE
OF
HUMANISM
of
those ends themselves; that
is to
say, by
the
external
purposeswhichtheyreflect.
These,indeed^
aretwovery
differentquestions.
Thelast
makesa.
moral reference which the
first avoids,
but both'
spring, and spring inevitably,
from the
link which
architecture has with life—from that
'
condition of
well-building
'
whichWottoncallscommodity.
And
architecture requires 'delight.' For this
reason, interwoven with practical ends and their
mechanicalsolutions, we maytrace in architecture
athirdanddifferentfactor—thedisinteresteddesire
forbeauty. Thisdesiredoesnot,itistrue,culmin-
atehere
in
apurelyaestheticresult,forithastodeal
with a concrete basis which is utilitarian. It is,
nonetheless, apurelyaesthetic
impulse,an impulse
distinctfrom
allthe otherswhicharchitecture may
simultaneouslysatisfy,animpulse
byvirtueofwhich
architecturebecomes
art. Itisa separate
instinct.
Sometimes
itwillborrowasuggestion
fromthelaws
of firmness or
commodity
;
sometimes
it will
run
counter
tothem, orbeoffended
by theformsthey
woulddictate. Ithasits
ownstandard,
andclaims
its own authority.
Itis possible,
therefore, toask]
howfar, and
howsuccessfully,
in any
architectural!
style,thisaesthetic
impulsehasbeen
embodied
;
how|
far, thatistosay,
theinstincts
which,
in theotheli
arts, exert an
obvious
and unhampered
activityj^
havesucceededin
realisingthemselves
also
through