52 THEARCHITECTURE
OF
HUMANISM
gravest,istoregard
architectureas
symbolic, Litera-
*tureispowerfultoinvest
withfascination
anyperiod
ofhistoryonwhichitsartis
imaginativelyexpended.
Underthe
influence,directly or
indirectly, oflitera-
turethewhole
pastoftheraceiscolouredforusin
attractiveorrepellenttones.
Ofsomeperiodsinevit-
ablywethinkwithdelight; ofothers
withdistaste.
Anewhistoricalperspective,anewliteraryfashion,
mayatanytimealterthe
feelingweentertain. Yet
the concreteartswhich these different periodspro-
ducedremainalwaysthe
same,stillcapableof
address-
ingthesameappealtothephysicalsenses. If,then,
wearetoattendimpartiallytothatpermanentappeal,
we must discount
these
'
literary
' preconceptions.
Buteverythingwhichrecallsaperiodofthepastmay
recall,
by
association, theemotionswith which
that
periodis, atthetime, poetically regarded. Andto
theseemotions, originally engendered by literature,
romanticismmakestheotherartssubservient. The
elementinourconsciousness whichoughttobedis-
counted, it makes paramount. Its interest
in the
artsisthat,
like
poetry,
they
shouldbringthemind
withinthecharmedcircleofimaginativeideas. But
theseideasreallybelongtotheliteraryimagination
whencetheysprang,andoneresultofapplyingthem
toarchitecture,wheretheyarenotinherent,
isthat
all permanenceand objectivityof
judgment islost.
Thus, forexample, the Gothic building from
being