56
THE
ARCHITECTURE OF
HUMANISM
romanticism, ancient
or modem,
has, it is safeto
say,
been aperiodof
marked antiquarianism.
The
glamour
ofthepast,andthe
romanticvenerationfor
it, are very
naturally extended to
the minutiae in
whichthe pastsooften
is preserved,and
are
bound
tolend encouragement totheirstudy.
Noris this
study
in itselfotherthan beneficial.
But
thefault
oftheantiquarian
spirit,inarchitecturalthought,is
precisely that it attaches an
undue
importance to
detail as opposed to those more general values of
Mass,
Space,
Line,andCoherencewithwhich archi-
tectureproperlydeals,andwhichitwillbethelater
purposeof
thisstudytoanalyse anddescribe. For
the presentit isenoughto
emphasisethe
factthat
betweenRenaissancearchitectureandtheantiquarian
criticism of the Romantic fallacy there is
a
funda-
mentalopposition: andthatoppositionliesintheir
attitudetodetail. Forantiquariancriticismregards
detailasthesupremeconsiderationand
Renaiissance
architectureregardsitasasecondaryandsubservient
consideration. And not only do they
give it a
differentdegree
ofimportance,but, stillmore,they
giveitanimportanceofawhollydifferent
kind. For
inRenaissancearchitecturethe
purposeofdetail,as
we
shallsee,is
primarilytogiveeffecttothevalues
of Mass, Space, Line, and Coherence
in the whole
design
;
and, secondarily,
upon a smaller scale, to
exhibit
these
qualitiesinitself. But
fortheromantic