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

(Ben Green) #1
76 THEARCHITECTURE

OF HUMANISM

garmentandHisbook
;


andthis,notintheelegant

and complimentary sense in which


Addison might

have so regarded her, butwith a


profound
power

to


satisfy the mystic's adoration. The argument

assumed
a


differentplane.

Tobe

'

natural
'

was
no

longerapointmerelyofpoeticcharm—^itwasapoint


ofsanctity. WithRuskin,forexample,theargument


fromNatureisalwaysfinal.


'

Canstthoudrawout

Leviathanwithahook


?

' Toimproveon Nature's

architecture were a like impertinence.
It is even


suggested that


formsare
beautifulpreciselyinrela-

tiontothefrequencywithwhichNaturehasemployed


them. And notonly does

he place asacramental

value on
the study of Nature deduced from an


arbitrarytheologicaldoctrinethatitisGod's


'

book,'

buthe makes itasin


tostudythe humaninstinct,

asthough
Nature's'book'hadexpurgatedman,and


themeritofcreationceasedatthefifthday. Doubt-


ful logicthis—and scarce orthodox


theology!

Yet

thereis littledoubt that Ruskin's reiterated appeal


to the example of Nature to witness against the


formalinstinctsofman,did far
moretoenforce


the

prejudice against
the


'

foul torrent of the Renais-

sance


'

thanheeffectedeitherbydetailed reasoning

orgeneralabuse, unthe faceofallthis

poetry

and

rhetoric, in the face
of all the sermons that were


eloquentinstones,itisnotsurprisingthatNaturalism


becametheaesthetic
method,andtheloveofNature

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