174
THE
ARCHITECTURE OF
HUMANISM
tecturalforms
givesplacetorestlessness: dignityis
puffed intodisplay.
Thesenseofgrandeurbecomes
thegreedforsize. ItistheperiodoftheBaroque:
the
periodofdecadence. Theproblemofstyleonce
solved
—Bramante's
school had solved it—^nothing
canremainbutanabuse
ofpower, andarchitecture
feelsthe strainof toomuch
liberty.
Asthearchi-
tectureof Bramantestoodlinked totheartofLeon-
ardo, so thisof the baroque shares in the
general
corruptionofthetime : a
time
when
*
godswithout
honour, men without humanity, nymphs without
innocence, satyrs without rusticity
gathered into
idiot groups on the polluted canvas and scenic
affectations encumbered the streets.' Scenic affec-
tations, broken cornices,
tripleand
quadruple
pedi-
ments, curved fagades, theatrical plans, gesticulat-
ingsculpture: everything isirrational, exaggerated,
abused. Thesearethedreamsof
a
collapsingmind
;
thisisthe violenceofasenile art: a sortofarchi-
tectural deUrium foretelling the approach of
death.
Butsenility, if
sometimes it is violent, is at other
momentsapathetic
;
andtheapproachofdissolution,
ifitisheraldedbydelirium,is
foreshadowedalsoin
coma.
Thusthe third periodofthe Renaissanceis
marked sometimes by an opposite mood
toits
ex-
travagance. The exquisite
proportions of Raphael
arehardened,
inthisdecline,intoacademicformulas
;
architecture,whenitisnot
ostentatious,becomesstiff.