THE
ROMANTIC
FALLACY
41
A.
have said
thatonly upon
fixed conditionscan
romanticism
expressitself
throughthemoreconcrete
arts. In
architecturethese
conditionsarethreefold.
First,
there should be
no fundamentalincongruity
betweentheforms
suggestedbytheromanticimpulse
and
thosecustomary
toarchitectureatthetimeof
their introduction.
For, since the architect can
never
whollyoverridecustomnor
contradicttradition,
andsincethe
transformationofstyleisconsequently
slow,it
followsthat the oldelements and
the
new
will have to exist, in
somesense, sidebyside.
/
So
long,
therefore,asthese remain incongruous,theex-
perimentwillbeendangered.
Secondly,itisessential
thattheromanticimpulseshouldcomeatamoment
whentheartofformisvigorous
enoughforthework
ofassimilation,
andcapableoftranslatingthepoetic
materialintoplasticshape. Finally,as
a
thirdcon-
dition,itisessential
thatthetechniqueandorganisa-
tion
required bythe newidealshould be, asfaras>
possible, identical with those of the existent art.
Forneithertechniquenororganisationcan
be
called
intobeingsuddenlyandatwill: yetontheseboth
the existence and the character of architectural
style
depend. The instruments, therefore, which
theromanticimpulsefindstoitshandmustbesuited
to
theformswhichit
seekstoimpose.
|
4,
."
Now
theidealof
architecturewhichthe Romantic