148
THE ARCHITECTURE
OF HUMANISM
architectural structure. It is
rapid and inexact.
It reveals, therefore, a slovenly
character andcan
onlypleaseaslovenlyattention.
Thefactsaretrue,but
the
deduction
isfalse. If
thebaroquebuildershadwishedto
savethemselves
trouble it would have been easy to refrain from
decorationaltogether,andacquire,it
maybe,moral
approbation for
'
severity.*
But
theyhadadefinite
purposeinview,andthepurposewasexact,though
it required
'
inexact
*
architectureforitsfulfilment.
Theywished to
communjicate,
througharchitecture,
asenseofexultantvigourandoverflowingstrength.}
Sofar, presumably, their purpose wasnot ignoble.
Anunequalled knowledgeofthe aestheticsof
archi-
tecture determined the means which theyadopted.
First,
for
strength,the building
must
be realisedas
a
mass,
athingwelded together,not parcelled,
dis-
tributed and joined. Hence, the composition (the
aestheticunityofparts) must
beimposing; and
no
one has yetsuggested that the baroque architects
lackedcomposition—eitherthezealfor
it
orthepower.
Next,again forthe
effectofmass,the partsshould
appear to flow together, merge into one another,
springfromoneanother,andform,
asitwere,afused
gigantic organism through
which currents of con-
tinuousvigour might beconceived
to run. A lack
of individual distinctness
in the parts—^a lack of
theintellectual
differentiation which
Bramante,
for