THE ROMANTIC FALLACY
47
wasmadeinaspiritofamusedpedantryandconscious
eccentricity,or,atmost,of
archaeologicalpatronage
;
norcould
theamateurs of that time have credited
theideathatthetrefoilsandpinnacles
ofWalpole's
toy heralded
amovement which would beforelong
exterminatealikethepracticeandtheunderstanding
oftheirart. Theironyofthissituationhasan
exact
and tragic counterpiart in the favour accorded at
thatepochbythemorephilosophic
andenlightened
oftheFrench
aristocracy
tothosetheoriesof'natural
'
equality (themselvesanotherexpression of romanti-
cism)whichweredestinedtodrive
thesenoblepatrons,
their philosophy and their enlightenment, entirely
outofexistence.
SidebysidewiththissenseofGothicasanamusing
exotic—an attitude which was thoroughly in the
Renaissance spirit and characteristic, above all, of
theeighteenthcentury
—
^theregrew
upamoreserious
perception ofits imaginative value. When Goethe
visits Strasburg Cathedral it is nolonger,
forhim,
theworkof
'
ignorantand
monkishbarbarians,'but
theexpressionofasublimeideal:andGoethe'smind
foreshadows that
of the coming century.
At the
same time he has no quarrel with the existing
standards;acompletereactionagainsttheseisasyet
unimaginable.
But
a
changeofattitudeshowsitself
both with regard to Gothicand also tothe living
style. Thesenow
camemore
and
more
tobe
regarded