214 THE
ARCHITECTURE OF
HUMANISM
II
To this statement several
objections
may be
expected. This
'
rising
'
of towers and
'
springing
'
ofarches,itwillbesaid—
thesedifferent
movements
whichanimate
architecture—aremere
metaphorsof
speech. Novalidinference
canbedrawn
fromthem.
Again, the enjoyment of fine
building is a simple
andimmediate
experience,whilethisdual
*
transcrip-
tion,' by which we interpret
the beauty of archi-
tecture,isa complicatedprocess.
Andnotonly—^it
willagainbeobjected
—^isthetheorytoocomplicated
;
itisalsotoophysical. Thebody,
itwillbesaid
,
plays
no part—or a
small and infrequent part
—
^in our
conscious enjoyment of
architecture, which com-
Berenson'sstudiesofItalianpainting,
wherethisviewofaesthetics
founditsmostfruitfulconcreteapplication.
With
this
exceptionthe
presentchapterhasbeenderivedwhollyfromthe
author'sownimmediate
experienceinthestudyandpracticeof
architecture,andisintended
tosatisfyratheranarchitecturalthana
philosophicalcuriosity. Time-
honouredas
Lipps'stheorynowis,andvalidasitappearstometobe,
itsinfluenceupoiipurelyarchitectural
criticismhasbeennegligible.
In Englisharchitecturalwriting it
is totallyignored
;
evenMr.
Blomfield,themostphilosophicalofourcritics,givesitbutafrigid
welcome. (TheMistressArt,
p.
ii8.) Yetitsarchitecturalimpor-
tance,bothfortheoryandpractice,isimmense; anditisforlack
ofitsrecognitionthattheFallaciesofCriticismstillflourishsoabun-
dantly. Forsometheorycriticismmusthave,andintheabsence
ofthetrue,itmakesshiftwiththepalpablyfalse.
j
Ihave avoided,asfaras clearness seemstopermit,allpurely
psychological discussion. Those interested in this aspect of the
matterwillfindintherecentwritingsofVernonLeethemostextensive
surveyofthequestionwhichhasappearedinEnglish,togetherwithall
necessaryreferQncestotheforeignliteratureofthesubject.