HUMANIST
VALUES
239
by
mass,space,
andline responds
tohuman physical
delight, and by coherence
answers
toour thought.
The^e
meanssufficed
them.
Giventhese,theycould
dispenseatwillwith
sculptureandwith
colour,with
academic precedents and
poetic f^cies, with the
strictlogicofconstruction
orofuse. All
these,also,
theycouldemploy, butbynone
of themwerethey
bound.
Architecture
based on Humanism became
anindependentart.
This principle of humanism
gives us the links
thatwerequire. Itforms thecommon
tiebetween
thedifferent phases—
^at
first sight
so contradictory
—of Renaissancestyle. It accounts foritsstrange
attitude,
at once obsequious and unruly,
to the
architectureof antiquity. It explains how Renais-
sance architecture
is alliedto the whole tendency
of thought with which it was contemporary
—
^the
humanistattitude
toliteratureandlife.
Man, as the savage firstconceived him, man, as
themindof
sciencestillafiirms,isnotthecentreof
theworldhelivesin,butmerelyoneofhermyriad
products,
more conscious than the rest and more
perplexed. A stranger onthe
indifferent
earth, he
adapts
himself slowly and painfully to inhuman
nature,andatmoments,
notwithout
peril,
compels
inhumannaturetohisneed. Aspectaclesurrounds
him—sometimessplendid,
often
morose,uncouth,and