HUMANIST
VALUES
241
stnictedaworldasmandesires
it,responsivetohis
instinctand
hisstature.
Buthumanismhasits practical
aspectaswellas
itsideal
;
and
thevalueswhich the Greekdefined
andfounded,Romemaintained,extendedand
trans-
ferred. Romanarchitecture,
lessfastidiousthanthe
Greekandlessrestricted,preservedtheprinciplesof
mass,
space, line, and coherence for rougher uses,
widerand more general. Itensuredtheirsurvival,
their independence
of the place and timewhence
theyhadsprung.
Thearchitecture which thusrose withhumanism
was with humanism eclipsed and with
humanism
restored. To pass from Roman architecture and
thatof
theRenaissancetothe
fantasticandbewildered
energy of Gothic, is toleave humanism for
magic,
thestudyofthecongruousforthe
cultofthestrange.
Itistofindthatthelogicofaninhumansciencehas
displaced the logic
of the human form. It is to
discover resplendent beauty of
detail, in glass and
bronzeandivory
andgold
;
itistolosearchitecture
insculpture. Thelinesofthis
amazed construction
areat one
momentcongruous with our
movement,
at thenext theycontradict it
with
a
cramped and
J
(angularconfusion.
Here spaceandcoherence
come,
ifat all,unsoughtandunregarded;
andwhenthey
comeitismostoftenbecause
theritualofthe
Church,
preservingsomethingofthe
paganorderitinherits,
Q