46 THE ARCHITECTURE
OF
HUMANISM
sectionofwaysinaWood
orWildernesse,'
werewell
enough. Heretheymightbe
admittedas
curiosities
—
^asliterary
remindersoftheromantic
past,orshrines
to the poetry of
nature with which the
mediaeval
stylewasconceived tobe related.
Above all,they
mightactasa
foiltotheclassicalelements
themselves,
and do a dual service by
stimulating the senseof
historywhiletheysetofftheimmaculateconsistency
of the time. The
Gothic suggestions might even
penetrate the house. They might, without dis-
cordancy,
provide the traceries of a book-case or
enrichthe
mouldingsof
a
Chippendale
table. Here
andthere, inthe light spiritoffashionablecaprice,
theymight
furnishthedecorationof
a
room,
justas,
elsewhere,anEasternschememightdominate. But
togofurther,
and
Gothicisethemaindesign,seemed,
atthe first, anobvious faultoftaste.
'
I delight,'
writes
GraytoWharton,
'
to
hear
youtalkofgiving
yourhousesomeGothicornamentsalready. Ifyou
project anything, I hope it will be entirely within
doors: and
don'tletme (when I comegapinginto
ColemanStreet) be directedtothe
"
gentleman'sat
thetenpinnacles
"
or
"
withtheChurch
Porchat
his
door."
'
^
And
when, at Strawberry Hill, Horace
Walpole
allowed
aquaint imitationof
mediaevalism
tofurnish
his
wholedesign, the
concession, startling
and
evenabsurd asit
seemedtohiscontemporaries,
>Letters
ofThomasGray,vol.I.Ko.
cxiv.