38
THEARCHITECTURE
OF
HUMANISM
and to explain.
\
So it
was with the
theory
of
architecture. How far, in
this change ofthought,
has it been strengthened and
enriched
;
how
far
encumbered and confused? A clear view of Re-
naissance
architecture requires an answer to this
question.
Although,in every department of thought,there
areprinciplespeculiar
to
it, necessary
toitsunder-
standing,andwith referencetowhich itshouldpro-
perlybeapproached, yetalltheelementsof
human
culturearelinkedinsocloseand
naturalafederation,
that when one among them becomespredominant,
the others are affected to an instantaneous sym-
pathy, and the standards appropriate
to the one
are transferred, with
however little suitability, to
all.
v'^Such,'towardsthe
closeoftheeighteenth century,
was the
case
of
the Romantic Movement, which,
frombeingan enlargementof the
poetic
sensibility,
came, in the course
of itsdevelopment, to modify
the dogmas andcontrolthe practiceof politicsand
of architecture.
By the stress which it laid
on
qualitiesthat
belongappropriately
to
literature,and
find place in architecture,
if at all, then onlyin
a
secondary degree,
itsofalsified the
real
significance
of the art that,
even at the
present time,
when
the Romantic
Movement is less
conspicuous
in