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

(Ben Green) #1
62 THE

ARCHITECTURE OF

HUMANISM

ative
elementisnotfixedororganisable;

itdoesnot

containthetrueintentionortypicalvalueoftheart,

andcannot
befittedtocontain

them.

X

Nowsincelanguage,meaning,andassociationplay

solargeapartinourpracticallife,andformthevery

textureofour thought,therehasbeen littledanger

atanytime
thatthesignificanceofliteraryartshould

beoverlooked. Therehasneverbeen—saveperhaps


to a slight degree in the eighi^enth century—^an

'architecturalfallacy'
inliterature,thoughithasoften

been thecase that theminorelementofvalue


the

sensuouselement of

literature—^is totallyforgotten.


Butthissame
habitualpreoccupation with 'signifi-

cance

'

which has
kept

literature
vitalhas,

in
archi-

tecture,ledus
to

lay
undueweightonwhatisthere

the
secondary element, and
to neglect its direct

Value,its
immediateandtypical
appeal. This,then,


isthe

'

literaryfallacy

'

in
architecture; Itneglects

thefactthatinliterature
meaning,or fixedassocia-

tion,istheuniversal
term
;

whilein
architecturethe

universal
termisthesensuous
experienceofsubstance

andofform,

j

/TheRomantic

Movementisaphase,

precisely,of

thisliterary
preoccupation. Itis the
most extreme

example
of the triumph
of association
over direct

experiences which
the history of
culture contains.


Itsinfluence
upontastecan never
bequiteundone

;

norneed wewish it.

Romanticism,
asa conscious
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