24
THE ARCHITECTURE
OF
HUMANISM
and which, but for that
expression,
would never,
perhaps,havebeensupposedtoexist.
Inthe
present
case, no
doubt,thispointcouldnot
bepressed very!
far. YetSt.
Peter'sandtheVatican,and
thegreat
monumentsof
restored Rome,arewitnesses
noless
tothepowerofarchitecture
tocreateanddefinethe
imaginative value of the Renaissance
papacy, than
to
the encouragement and inspiration which the
papacy
contributed to art. Moreover, the char-
acterofthepapacy
inthisperiodwasla,rgely
formed
by the character of its popes
;
and such men as
Pius
II.,
Leo X., and
Julius
ii., were fit patrons
of
Renaissance architecture,partlyforthe reason that
,
theywerecultivatedenthusiasts,a\yaketotheideals;
ofanart which, quite independentlyofthemselves,
had given evidence of its nature, and which was
already,intheeyesofallmen,an
energysovigorous
andsplendid,thatthepopescouldconceivenosecurer
meansofaddingtotheir fame than by inviting
its
support.
So, too, with the more particular
religious and
socialmovementsbywhichthephases
ofRenaissance
architecturehave
sometimesbeenexplained. When
the
Counter-Reformation
madeitsbidforpopularity,
it
erected on every hand
churches in the
baroque
manner frankly
calculated
todelightthesensesand!
kindle comnion
enthusiasms.
Never,
perhaps, has
architecturebeenmore
successfullyor
moredeliber-