192
THE ARCHITECTUREOF HUMANISM
Renaissance ideal: and Greece and
Rome,
almost
of
necessity,became itsimageanditssymbol. The
Roman Empire had set
the summit of
achieved
power: the Holy Roman Empirehad preservedits
memory. The names of Greeks and Romans sur-
vived
asnamesofconquest
;
even Virgiland
Ovid
weremagicians,necromancers,
kings. In
theirwords,
ifthedue sorcerybe found, powerstilllayhidden.
Butmostofall,becausemostvisible,thestoneswhich
the Romans had
built endured into the
mediaeval
world, dwarfingitbytheirscaleandovershadowing
it with theirdignity. These weretokens of power
whichallcouldunderstand,andtheireffect
uponthe
awakeningmind ofthe Renaissance may
bejudged
inthesonnets of DuBellay. Humanism,therefore,
inevitably fastened the imagination of architects
uponthebuildingsofRome.
TheRenaissancestyle,wehavealreadyseen,isan
architectureoftaste,seekingnologic,consistency,or
justificationbeyondthatofgivingpleasure. Inthis,
clearly,it followsthenatural bent
ofhumanism,in
itsstressonlibertyofwill. Andthebaroquemanner
withitspsychologicalmethod,its
high-handedtreat-
ment of mechanical fact and
traditional forms,
is
typically humanistic. But
this claim of freedom
involvedarchitectureinadilemma. For
every
art,
andarchitecturemorethanany, requires
a
principle
of
permanence. Itneeds
athemetovary,aresisting