2o6 THE
ARCHITECTURE
OF
HUMANISM
parts. Ratio,
identity, and
correspondence form
partofthenecessary
webandfabric
ofourthought.
Reason
is compelled to
seekthem, WTien it
finds
themwefeel
consciousofunderstanding
andcontrol.
Orderis a desire of
the mind. Andit isfoundin
classic
architecture. What more
natural, then, than
to say that
architectural beauty
—
^the beauty of
classicarchitecture,atany
rate—consistsinOrder?
Whathigher
ormoreperfectbeauty,Plato
asked,can
exist,than
mathematicalbeauty? Andtheacademic
criticism, with its canon of
mathematical ratios,
enforcesthe
demand.
Theintellectual
biasofourcriticismmustbepro-
foundwhichallowsthistheory'tobeasserted. For
this agreeable
fancy—so flattering to the intellect,
andsoexalted—
dissolvesatthefirstbrushofexperi-
ence. It shouldatonce beapparentthatOrderin
design
istotally^stinctfromBeauty. Manyofthe
ugliest
patterns and most joyless buildings
—
^build-
ings from which no being can ever have derived
delight
—
possessOrderinahighdegree
;
they
exhibit
fixedandevidentratiosofdesign. Instancesofthis
amongthehideousfiats,warehousesandothercom-
mercialbuildingsofour streets
require nocitation.
Hereis Order,andnobeauty,but,onthe contrary,
ugliness.
Eighteenth-century critics,
perceiving this diffi-
culty, werefond ofsayingthat beauty
consistedin