70 THE
ARCHITECTURE OF
HUMANISM
Whatmeasure of beautymay
belong to
such an
architecturewilllaterbeconsidered..
Itisirrelevant
heretoinsistonthe
unfortunateeffectit
iscalculated
toproducewhenreiterated,
withhow
monotonousa
variety, on eitherside ofacontinuous
street. But
certainly,whateverbeits
merits, thehabit
oftaste
which it implies is hardly
favourable toan under-
standing of the Renaissance. •''Order and
subtleties
ofproportionrequirean
habitualtrainingintheeye.
TheGreeks,assomeofthe
'
optical
'
correctionsof
the Parthenon have revealed,
responded here to
distinctions of which to-day evena
practised taste
willbe
almostinsensible. TheRenaissanceinherited
their ideal, if not their delicacy
of sense. But a
'
natural' architecture, so far from
affording such
practiceto
theeye, raisesaprejudiceagainst
order
itself
;
becausewhatever
qualitiesa
'
natural'archi-
tecturemaypossessare dependent
on the negation
of
order.
Atasteformedupon thisviolent and
ele-
mentaryvariousnessof
form,conceivesaRenaissance
frontasablankmonotonybecausethat,by
contrast,
isallitcandiscern. Whatwonder,then,ifit
accepts
theverdictofthepoetryofNature,anddeclaresthe
Renaissance style to be a weary and
contemptible
pomp, while it endows its own incompetence
with
the
natural
'
dignity
'
ofthefieldsandwoods.
)
^Two duties, then, were required of architecture
whenthepoetryofNaturehaddoneitswork. First,