The architecture of humanism; a study in the history of taste

(Ben Green) #1

44


THEARCHITECTURE

OF

HUMANISM

tothemiddleofthe

eighteenth

centurythe

mediaeval

stylemerelyspeltdiscomfort,


desolation,

and

gloom.^

Noble

owners,sofarastheiTpurse

allowed,

converted

theirGothicinheritances,


asbestthey

could,to

the

Georgian taste, or rebuilt

them

outright. Then

entersthespirit

ofhistory,the

romance ofthedis-

tant and the past,

with archaeology

at its'heels.

The connoisseurs, about 1740,

are full of zeal for

the stylistic


distinctionsbetween the

Egyptian, the

Gothic, and the Arabesque,


and charmingly

vague

about


theirlimits. Theirstudiesare

pursued with-

out calling in


question the superior

fitness of th^

classical tradition.


Nevertheless, the orthodoxies

of


archaeologynowhold sway. Theyare

submitted

tonotwithout


reluctance. Gray, in
1754,

writes

of

Lord Brooke, at Warwick


Castle:

'

He has sash'd

thegreat


Appartment... andbeingsincetoldthat

square sash-windows


were not Gothic, he has put

certain whim-wams within side the glass, which,

appearingthrough,aremadetolooklike

fret-work.

Then he has scooped out a little Burrough in

the

massy walls of
the


place forhis little selfand his

children, which is hung with chintzesin theexact


*
There werenot wanting those who maintained this opinion

throughoutthewholeperiodoftheromanticmovement. In1831,


whenitwasatitsheight,eventhestatelyandtemperedmedievalism


ofKnolestillinspirestheDuchessedeDinowiththeutmostmelancholy:


'
Cettevieilleffee(thehousekeeper)montrefortbienI'antiqueetlugubre


d6meuredeKnowles,dontlatristesseestincomparable.'—Duchessede

Dino,Chronique.

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