220 THE
ARCHITECTURE OF
HUMANISM
—
^beaserious
obstacletoourtheoryif
theconception
of
architecture,asanartof
designbasedonthehuman
body and
its states, had been
wholly alien to the
architectsofthe
past. Butthisisnotaltogetherthe
case. The Renaissance
architectswere,infact, fre-
quently
curioustofoundtheirdesign
uponthe
human
body,or,rather,to
understandhowthehumanbody
enteredintothecurrent
traditionsofdesign. Among
their
sketches may be found some where the pro-
portionsofthe
maleformarewovenintothoseofan
architecturaldrawingand madeto
correspond
with
its
divisions. Anelaborate,thoughuninspired,render-
ingoftheTuscan,Ionic,and
CorinthianOrdersinto
human forms waspublished by John Shutein the
earliest
printed work on architecture in England.
And inthis
connectionthe ancient,
thoughseldom
felicitous, habit of actuallysubstituting caryatides
and
giantsforthecolumnitselfisnotwithoutsignifi-
cance. Itwas
realised
thatthe
human
bodyinsome
wayenteredintothequestionofdesign. Buthabits
ofthought
wereatthattime
tooobjectivetoallow
menanyclearunderstandingofaquestionwhichis,
after
all,oneofpurepsychology.
Whattheyinstinc-
tivelyapprehended
they
hadnomeansintellectually
to state
;
and that correspondence of architecture
to the body, which was true
in abstract principle,
they sometimes vainly
sought to prove in concrete
detail. Thus they looked in
architecture for
an