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

(Ben Green) #1
THE ROMANTIC FALLACY

77

the mostgenuineemotionofourage. Theemotion

wasasuniversal


as itwas genuine.] A richharvest

ofinvention rewarded thisattentivehumilityinthe


empirical sciences; the generation was encouraged


byEmersonto'hitch itswaggontoastar'; thedis-


cipline ofNature,poeticallyinspiredand religiously


sanctioned, was pragmatically confirmed. Once


morein thechanges ofcivilisation,to

'

liveaccord-

ingtoNature


*

became
a

creed.

Butto liveaccordingto Naturemeans also,inci-

dentally,tobuildandtogardenaccordingtoNature.


And since the sublimity of Nature

—^its claim


to

worship


^layinitsaloofindifferencetomanandin

itsincalculablevariety,to

buildand garden accord-

ing to Nature meant, as

the progress of art soon

demonstrated, to have

a house and garden which

betrayed,sofaraspossible,

nohumanagencyatall


or, atleast, such humanagencyasmightbe

mani-

fested must be free

from one specifically human

quality


^the

'

self-contemplating

reason.' This,with

itsinsistence

onorder,symmetry,logic,

andpropor-

tion,stood,inthe

ethicsofNature,forthesupreme

idolatry.^

'

This

mayperhapsfurnishaphilosophic

basisfortheadviceonce

offeredbyaFrenchnobleman,when

consultedastothemostpro-

pitious

methodoflayingoutagarden

inthethennovelRomantic

Manner

:

'

Enivrezlejardinier

etsuivezdanssespas.'

The

'

self-

contemplatingreason,'


temporarilydethronedbythis expedient,is,

forRuskin,aconstantsourceof

politicaltyranny,architectural

pedantry

andspiritualpride.
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