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.