THE
ACADEMIC TRADITION
195
founded his great work upon it, and
its influence
reachedEngland by
1563
inthe
briefessayof
John
Shute.
Through the
pagesofSerlio, Vitruvius
sub-
jugated France, till then abandoned
to the trifling
classicism of Franqois i.
;
through those
of Pal-
ladio hebecame supreme in England.
'Nature,O
Emperor,'wrotetheAugustancritic,
'
hasdeniedme
a
fullstature
:
myvisageislined
withage: sickness
has
impaired
my
constitution.... Yet,
though
deprived ofthese nativegifts, Itrust
togain some
praisethrough theprecepts
I
shall
deliver. Ihave
notsoughttoheapupwealththrough myart..
..
Ihaveacquiredbutlittlereputation. Yet
Istillhope
bythisworktobecomeknownto
posterity.' Never
was a hope more abundantly fulfilled. Upon
this
obsequious, short, and unprospering architect
the
wholegloryof antiquitywasdestined
tobeconcen-
trated. Europe, forthreehundred years,bowed to
himastoagod.
The treatise
which hassoprofoundly
altered the
visibleworld wasindeed exactlydesignedto fitthe
temperof the Renaissance. It is less a theory of
architecture than
an encyclopaedia of
knowledge,
general and particular, in easy combination.
'
On
theOriginofAllThingsAccordingtothePhilosophers'
is
thetitleofonechapter: the
next
is
named
'
Of
Bricks.' The influence of older Greek treatises is
everywhere apparent, particularly in
the
subtle