26 THE
ARCHITECTURE OF
HUMANISM
architectural
history—helped, no
doubt, to create
the demand which
architecture satisfied.
But
the
significant point is precisely
that it was
to
artistic
usesthat
thiswealth,thispower,and
theseopportun-
ities,were
devoted,andtoartisticuses
of
aparticular
kind. Rich
andflourishingsocietieshavenotseldom
grownup,andaregrowingup
inourowntime,
without
anycorrespondingresult. Prosperity
is
a condition
of great achievements
;
it is not their cause. It
does
not even stand in any fixed relation to
their
progress. Itprovides power,butdoesnot,artistic-
ally,controlitsuse. Theeconomicconditions
which,
inItaly,assistedthe
architecture
of
theRenaissance
toassumesuch prominence, did not vary with the
markedandswiftalterationsofitsstyle.
Thestyle
hadanorbit, andanimpetus,
ofitsown. InItaly
nothing is commoner than to find an architectuigl
displaywhollydisproportionate,
andevenunrelated,
tothe
socialpurpose
itostensiblyfulfils,andtothe
importanceorprosperityof
the
individuals
or
com-
munitiesresponsible
foritsexistence. Princelygates,
more
imposing
than those of a greatmansion,lift
up their headsin the loneliest
places of the Cam-
pagna,butnothing
gloriousgoesin. Theylead,and
have always led, to unpeopled pastures
or
humble
farmsteads. The baroque
spirit delighted in
this
gay inconsequence. It
appreciated
grandeur
forits
ownsake,
aesthetically
;
and
ithadasenseofparadox.