136
THEARCHITECTURE
OF
HUMANISM
nowreacting. Ithad
grownupalong
withthe
abuses
which
werehenceforthto
beexpelled
fromthemoral
ordering
of life. And
these abuses—to
use the
question-begging
phrase of naodern
criticism
—
'
itex-
pressed.'
^
Ithad
exaltedprincesand
ministeredto
popes. Itstoodforthesubordination
ofthedetail
to the^design,
ofthecraftsman tothe
architect, of
conscience to authority,
of whim tocivilisation, of
the
individual will toan organised
control. These
thingswere
hatefultothe philosophyofrevolution.
Theywerehatefulno
less
to
thephilosophyoflaissez
faire.
The architecture of the Renaissance
shared
inevitablytheircondemnation.
Moreover,theminds
alikeofthegoodcitizenwhogloriedinindustrialism,
andofthethinkerwho
shrankfromit,wereturnedto
thefutureratherthanthepast.
Eventhemediaeval
day-dreamsofMorriswereapropagandaandessen-
tially prophetic. Now the
neo-Gothic experiment
and the architecture ofsteel, whatever
their initial
failures, could claim
to
bestilluntried
;
fromthem
might
still
spring the undreamt-of
pinnacles which
should crown the Utopiasof the capitalistand the
reformer. But
the Renaissance
style represented
'
Abusesintheorganisationofsocietymaysometimes,asinthe
Frencheighteenthcentury,
bea
precondition
of
certainachievements
inthearts. Buttheartisticachievementsdonotonthataccount
'
express'thesocialconditions,thoughtheonemayrecalltheother
toourmind. Itwouldbeastruetosaythattheviewfromamoun-
tain 'expressed'thefatigueof gettingtothetop. Whether the
mountainisworthclimbingisanotherquestion.