78 THE
ARCHITECTURE
OF HUMANISM
On the one side was Nature:
the curves of the
waves,thelineof
theunfoldingleaf,the
patternof
the
crystal. Allthese
mightbestudied,and
insome
way
architecturally employed
—
^no
matter how—so long
asthe
knowledgeandtheloveof
themwereevident.
Ontheother
stoodtheprinciplesofPalladio,andall
the pedantryof rule
and measure, madebarrenby
the conscious intellect. The
choice between
them
was a moral choice
between reverence and vanity.
Thiswasthe
refrainof TheStones
of
Veniceand all
thecriticism
'
accordingto
Nature.'
The
cultofNaturehasa venerablehistory; but
itisinteresting
tonoticethechangeithashereunder-
gone. ForNature,asthe romanticcriticsconceive
it,issomethingvery
differentfromtheNaturewhich
theirStoic
predecessorssetupasanideal, and
very
differentalsofromNatureasitactuallyis. Forthe
elementin
Naturewhich mostimpressed theStoics
waslaw,andits
throne
wasthe
humanreason.
/To
'
follow
reason
'
and
*
tolive according toNature
'
for
Marcus Aurelius were convertible terms. The
human
intellect,
with its inherent, its
'
natural
'
leaningstowardsorder,balance,andproportion,was
a
partofNature,anditwas
themost
admirableand
importantpart. ButNature,intheethicallanguage
ofhermodern aestheticdevotees, standsmostoften
in definite contradistinction to
the human
reason
.\
They
were
willing
torecogniseauthority
'
inthe
round