i82 THE
ARCHITECTURE OF
HUMANISM
ence. So
littleisit truethat the
energy
of arace
risesandfallsinordered
sequencethateveninartistic
activitythemostdivergentresultsweresimultaneous
;
andwhile
architecturesprangforward, paintinglost
itsnerve
asanindividualart,anditssolelight
was
reflectedfromtheconflagrating
splendour
ofbaroque
architecture.
EvenfortheEmpire
stylethechargeof
decadence
—
thoughheremoreplausible
—^isnotconvincing.
Here,
indeed, isdisplayed a preoccupationwith aliterary
idealthat
isneverwithoutmenacetoanart
ofform.
Yettheformsofthestylewerecongruous toalive
tradition
;
they were beautiful
;
they wereconsis-
tentlyapplied.
Thejudgment
of
decadence ishere
anexpostfactojudgment. TheEmpirestyledid,in
factandasapointofhistory,markthedissolution
of
Renaissance architecture. It hadno future
; it
linked itselftono results. But thismightwellbe
accounted foron purely social grounds. Achange
ofpatronagein the arts, a profound changeinthe
preoccupationofsociety, acollapseofold organisa-
tions, werenecessarily, in France,the sequelofthe
Revolution and the Napoleonic wars. France, not
Italy,,wasatthismomenttheholderofthetorchof
architecture. Ifthetorchfellandwasextinguished,
weneednotargue
thatitwasburntout.
Decadenceis abiological metaphor. Withinthe
fieldofbiologyitholds
trueasafact,andis
subject