HUMANIST VALUES
219
example,whois
takingpartinanexcitinggame,
will
feelexhilarationandmayenjoy
it; buttheovertones
ofgaiety,thefullintellectualandemotionalinterest
of
thestate,aredrownedin thephysical
experience.
Themindisnotfreetoattendtothem. Itis pre-
ciselybecausetheconsciousphysicalelement
inarchi-
tecturalpleasure is soslight,
ourimitative self-ad-
justmenttoarchitecturalformsosubtle,thatweare
enabled to attend wholly to the intellectual
and
emotional
valuewhichbelongs
tothephysicalstate.
If
welookatsomespiritedeighteenth-centurydesign,
alllife and
flicker
and
fullofvigorousand
dancing
curves,the physicalecho ofmovement which they
awaken
is enoughto recall the appropriate mental
andemotionalpenumbra;
itisnotsufficienttoover-
whelm
it. Noonehassuggestedthattheexperiences
ofartare
asviolentorexcitingastheexperiencesof
physical activity;
but it is claimed for themthat
theyare
subtler,more profound,,
more
lasting,and,
asitwere,
possessedofgreaterresonance. Andthis
difference
thetheoryweareconsidering
assistsusto
understand.
Any
explanationof
the workings ofthe
aesthetic
instinct, however
accurate, must
inevitablyhave a
modernring. It
mustseemincongruouswhen
applied
tothe
artistsofthepast,for
theneedandthelanguage
ofsuchexplanations
areessentially
ofourownday.
Itwouldriot
thwefore
—
^to
passtothenext
objection