i6 THE
ARCHITECTURE OF
HUMANISM
though impassioned,
was too
reactionary,
his con-
clusionstooacademicand
tooset,for
an agewhen
creative
vigourwasstill,beyond
measure,
turbulent.
Withthat
turbulencenoartthat
wasnot rapidand
pictorialinitsappeal
couldnowkeeppace.
The
time
was past when an architecture
of such calculated
restraint as Sammichele had
foreshadowed
could
capture
longattention
;
andtheartofPeruzzi,rich
though it was
with never-exhausted possibilities,
seems to have perished unexplored, because, so to
say, its tempo was too slow, its interest
too
unob-
trusive.
Vignola, stronger perhaps than these, is
before long forgotten in Bernini.
Architecture
becomes a debatable ground between
the ideals of
structureand
decoration, andfromtheirfertilecon-
flict new inventions areever forthcoming
to please
a rapidly
- tiring taste. Fashions
die; but the
Renaissance
itself, more irresistible than any force
which it produced, begets its own
momentum, and
passes on, with almost the
negligent fecundity of
nature, self-destructive and self-renewing.
Weareconfrontedwith
aperiodofarchitectureat
oncedaringand
pedantic,andasuccessionofmasters
theorthodoxy
ofwhoseprofessions
isoftenequalled!
onlybythelicenceof
theirpractice. In
spite
ofits
libertyofthought,
inspiteofitskeen
individualism,
the Renaissance
is yet an
age of
authority;
and
Rome, butpagan Rome
thistime,is
oncemorethe