THEACADEMIC
TRADITION 207
'
a
judiciousmixtureofOrder
andVariety
'
;
andthis
definition,forwantofabetter,hasbeen
a
thousand
timesrepeated. The
emendationassistsuslittle,for
onthenatureofthe
'
judicious'nolightisthrown,
savethat
itliesin
ameanbetween thetoomuchon
theonehand,andthetoolittleontheother. And,
bya
stillmorefatal
oversight,itisnotobservedthat
almosteverypossiblegradationoforderandvariety
is found among things admittedly beautiful, and
no less among things admittedly ugly. A certain
minimumoforderis implied in all design,good or
bad
;
but, giventhis, itis clear that whatsatisfies
theeyeisnotOrder,noraratiobetweenOrderand
Variety,butbeautiful Orderand beautiful Variety,
and
theseinalmostanycombination.
Order,itisallowed,bringsintelligibility; itassists
our thought. But the act of quickly and clearly
perceiving uglinessdoes not becomemore pleasant
because
it
isquick,northeuglinessbeautifulbecause
itisevident
;
andordercombinedwithugUness
serves
but
to
render
that
uglinessmoreobviousandtostamp
itgloomilyuponthemind.
So, too, with proportion-. Theattempt has con-
stantly been made to
discover exact mathematical
sequences in beautiful buildings as
though their
presence
were
likelyeithertocausebeautyorexplain
it. Theintervalsofavulgartunearenot
lessmathe-
maticalthan those of
noble music, andthe propor-