THE ROMANTIC
FALLACY
69
great house.
J
But while
the Georgian
taste sought
toimpart
tothecottagetheseemlydistinctionofthe
manor,themodempreferenceis
to
makethemanor
share in the romantic charm of the cottage. In
Latin countries this architecture is not found
;
its
placeis
whollytakenbyaresurrectionofthe
'
Styles.'
But in England, wherethehold ofstyleis slighter
andthesentimentoflandscapemore profound, the
rusticinfluenceintastehasbeenextreme. It
favours
an architecturewhichsatisfiespracticalconvenience,
and, for the rest, relies on a
miscellanyofsloping
roofs and jutting chimneys to give a
*
natural
'
beautytothe group. Saveforacertain choice
in
thematerialsand
somebroadmassingofthecomposi-
tion,theparts bearnorelationto
one anotherorto
thewhole. No
such
relationis attempted,fornone
is desired. The building
grows, without direction,
from the casual exigencies of its
plan. The effect
intended,
if not
secured, is wholly
'
natural.'
The
houseistotakethe colour
ofthecountryside,tolie
hidden inthe shadowsand
groupitself among the
slopes. Such,
in fairness, is its ideal,
realised too
seldom. So
farasthisarchitecture
takesanyinspira-
tionfromthepast,it
lookstotheold
farm-buildings
longlived
in,patched,adapted,
overgrown
:
buildings,
sounconsciousin
theirintent,soaccidental
in their
history,
as almostto form part
of the Nature that
surroundsthem,andfor
whoseservicethey
exist.