The architecture of humanism; a study in the history of taste

(Ben Green) #1
68 THE

ARCHITECTUREOF

HUMANISM

their

bidding a change was wrought

throughout

Europe,

assuddenasitwascomplete.

Inamoment

every valleyhad been dejected,

thestraightmade

crooked,

andtheplainplacesrough.

The

changeinarchitecturewasnotslowtofollow.

Here,asthelastchapter

showed,
a

romanticsense
of

history,treating styles assymbols, couldlookwith

equal

favourontheGothicandtheGreek,andhad

provoked a

romantic revival of both. But
the

romantic sense of

Nature weighted the balance
in

favour

of the mediaeval. The Gothicbuilders be-

longed to the

'noblysavage' north,and hadbuilt

against a background of forest and tempest. The

Greeks

stoodforreason,civilisation,andcalm. More

thanthis,a

certain

'

natural
'

qualitybelonged
tothe

Gothicstyleitself. LikeNature,itwasintricateand

strange
;

in detail realistic, in composition it was

bold,


accidental andirregular, like thecomposition

of the

physical world,i^Among

the causes of the

Gothicrevival,thepoetryofNature,thatcastonall

such


qualitiesits transforminglight, may

certainly

begivenan

importantplace.

|

uTheinfluenceofthesenseofNatureuponbuilding

did not

exhaust itself in the
taste for Gothic. In

Englandtheregrewupadomesticarchitecturewhich

attaches itselftonohistoric styleand
attemptsno


definite


design.
It

is
applied, like the Georgian

manner

before
it,indifferentlytothecottage
and

the
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