THE BIOLOGICAL FALLACY \
179
concrete,asnootherstylehasdone,themind's
ideal
of
perfect humanism. But the authentic
siiirit of
Bramante comes to us in how few examples
;
an
element
ofweakness
—
^anelementof philosophy
too
rareand too exclusive—withered his inspiratiipn at
its
birth. Ofallthethreestagesofthe Renaisfeance
sequence,this
central periodwasthemost
intensely
academic. ItcouldbeasvacantastheEmpire^tyle,
andas
imitative. The spiritoflife which,inspon-
taneousgaiety, never
fails
toplay upon the sunny
architectureofthequattrocento
;
thelifewhichinthe
seicento
flamedoutandgaveitselfinprodigalabund-
ancetoathousandventures
;
thelifewhichhadbeen
smiling
and later laughed aloud, flickers too often
in these intervening
years to a dim, elusive spark.
Muchthatwas then builtbyadmired masters
—
^by
the
youngerSangallo, for example
—
would justify
the
'
evolutionary
'
strictures,had
itbeenbuiltlater.
Ifaservile attendanceonthe antiqueis amark of
declining
force,
Bramante himself must stand con-
victed ofdecadence, for no imitation is more self-
effacingthan
hisdomedchapelofS.PietroinMon-
torio. Hereisthebeauty
ofanecho: life,here,is
scarcely stirring. The Roman civilisation, in that
favoured moment,
was the most brilliant that the
Renaissance achieved, the
most rounded and com-
plete. Butits
architecture,forthemostpart,hada
taintoftoomuch thought,too
incompleteavigour.