THE
ROMANTIC FALLACY
53
the'expression'of'ignorantandmonkishbarbarians,'
came to 'suggest' the idealised
Goth
—
'firm in
his
faith and noble in his aspirations'
—
^whoinspired
the enthusiasm of Coleridge
; and the
forms ofan
architecture
which later came to be admired as
the lucid expression of constructive mathematics
wereabout
thistime
commonlypraisedasthearchi-
tecturalimageofprimevalforests. Somemindsfind
intheworkofthemediaevalbuilderstherecordofa
rude and
unrestingenergy
; others valueit asthe
evidenceofadreamingpiety. Now,itisan
'
expres-
sionofinfinity
made
imaginable
'
;
next,
theembodi-
mentof
'
inspired
'
democracy. It
is
clearthatthere
isnolimittothiskindofwriting,andwehaveonly
to followthe
romantic criticismthrough itsdiverse
phases to feel convinced of its total lack of any
objective significance. Any characteristic, real or
imagined,ofamixedsetofnorthern
races,duringa
periodofseveralhundredyears,isdiscoveredat
will
in these cathedrals
of the twelfth and thirteenth
centuries,althoughitismorethandoubtful
howfar
suchcharacteristicsarecapableofbeingembodied
in
architecture,
or, if embodied,how far we,with
our
modern habits of
thought, can extract them
un-
falsified, or, if extracted,how fartheyare
relevant
tothe quality
of thework. Thewhole
process is
purely literary, its charm
is in the literary value
of the idea
itself, or in the act and process
of