<p><span class="scs">XXXIV</span>. Now observe. The transitional (or especially
Arabic) style of the Venetian work is centralised by the date
1180, and is transformed gradually into the Gothic, which extends
in its purity from the middle of the thirteenth to the beginning
of the fifteenth century; that is to say, over the precise
period which I have described as the central epoch of the
life of Venice. I dated her decline from the year 1418; Foscari
became doge five years later, and in his reign the first
marked signs appear in architecture of that mighty change
which Philippe de Commynes notices as above, the change to
which London owes St. Paul’s, Rome St. Peter’s, Venice and
Vicenza the edifices commonly supposed to be their noblest,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page023"></SPAN>23</span>
and Europe in general the degradation of every art she has
since practised.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXXV</span>. This change appears first in a loss of truth and
vitality in existing architecture all over the world. (Compare
“Seven Lamps,” chap. ii.) All the Gothics in existence, southern
or northern, were corrupted at once: the German and
French lost themselves in every species of extravagance; the
English Gothic was confined, in its insanity, by a strait-waistcoat
of perpendicular lines; the Italian effloresced on the mainland
into the meaningless ornamentation of the Certosa of Pavia
and the Cathedral of Como (a style sometimes ignorantly called
Italian Gothic), and at Venice into the insipid confusion of the
Porta della Carta and wild crockets of St. Mark’s. This corruption
of all architecture, especially ecclesiastical, corresponded
with, and marked the state of religion over all Europe,—the
peculiar degradation of the Romanist superstition, and of public
morality in consequence, which brought about the Reformation.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXXVI</span>. Against the corrupted papacy arose two great
divisions of adversaries, Protestants in Germany and England,
Rationalists in France and Italy; the one requiring the purification
of religion, the other its destruction. The Protestant
kept the religion, but cast aside the heresies of Rome, and with
them her arts, by which last rejection he injured his own character,
cramped his intellect in refusing to it one of its noblest
exercises, and materially diminished his influence. It may be a
serious question how far the Pausing of the Reformation has
been a consequence of this error.</p>
<p>The Rationalist kept the arts and cast aside the religion.
This rationalistic art is the art commonly called Renaissance,
marked by a return to pagan systems, not to adopt them and
hallow them for Christianity, but to rank itself under them as
an imitator and pupil. In Painting it is headed by Giulio
Romano and Nicolo Poussin; in Architecture by Sansovino
and Palladio.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXXVII</span>. Instant degradation followed in every direction,—a
flood of folly and hypocrisy. Mythologies ill understood at
first, then perverted into feeble sensualities, take the place of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page024"></SPAN>24</span>
the representations of Christian subjects, which had become
blasphemous under the treatment of men like the Caracci.
Gods without power, satyrs without rusticity, nymphs without
innocence, men without humanity, gather into idiot groups upon
the polluted canvas, and scenic affectations encumber the streets
with preposterous marble. Lower and lower declines the level
of abused intellect; the base school of landscape<SPAN name="FnAnchor_23" href="#Footnote_23"><span class="sp">23</span></SPAN> gradually
usurps the place of the historical painting, which had sunk into
prurient pedantry,—the Alsatian sublimities of Salvator, the
confectionery idealities of Claude, the dull manufacture of
Gaspar and Canaletto, south of the Alps, and on the north the
patient devotion of besotted lives to delineation of bricks and
fogs, fat cattle and ditchwater. And thus Christianity and
morality, courage, and intellect, and art all crumbling together
into one wreck, we are hurried on to the fall of Italy, the revolution
in France, and the condition of art in England (saved by
her Protestantism from severer penalty) in the time of George
II.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXXVIII</span>. I have not written in vain if I have heretofore
done anything towards diminishing the reputation of the Renaissance
landscape painting. But the harm which has been
done by Claude and the Poussins is as nothing when compared
to the mischief effected by Palladio, Scamozzi, and Sansovino.
Claude and the Poussins were weak men, and have had no
serious influence on the general mind. There is little harm in
their works being purchased at high prices: their real influence
is very slight, and they may be left without grave indignation
to their poor mission of furnishing drawing-rooms and assisting
stranded conversation. Not so the Renaissance architecture.
Raised at once into all the magnificence of which it was capable
by Michael Angelo, then taken up by men of real intellect and
imagination, such as Scamozzi, Sansovino, Inigo Jones, and
Wren, it is impossible to estimate the extent of its influence on
the European mind; and that the more, because few persons
are concerned with painting, and, of those few, the larger number
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page025"></SPAN>25</span>
regard it with slight attention; but all men are concerned
with architecture, and have at some time of their lives serious
business with it. It does not much matter that an individual
loses two or three hundred pounds in buying a bad picture, but
it is to be regretted that a nation should lose two or three hundred
thousand in raising a ridiculous building. Nor is it
merely wasted wealth or distempered conception which we have
to regret in this Renaissance architecture: but we shall find in
it partly the root, partly the expression, of certain dominant
evils of modern times—over-sophistication and ignorant classicalism;
the one destroying the healthfulness of general society,
the other rendering our schools and universities useless to
a large number of the men who pass through them.</p>
<p>Now Venice, as she was once the most religious, was in her
fall the most corrupt, of European states; and as she was in her
strength the centre of the pure currents of Christian architecture,
so she is in her decline the source of the Renaissance.
It was the originality and splendor of the palaces of Vicenza
and Venice which gave this school its eminence in the eyes of
Europe; and the dying city, magnificent in her dissipation, and
graceful in her follies, obtained wider worship in her decrepitude
than in her youth, and sank from the midst of her admirers
into the grave.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXXIX</span>. It is in Venice, therefore, and in Venice only that
effectual blows can be struck at this pestilent art of the Renaissance.
Destroy its claims to admiration there, and it can assert
them nowhere else. This, therefore, will be the final purpose
of the following essay. I shall not devote a fourth section to
Palladio, nor weary the reader with successive chapters of vituperation;
but I shall, in my account of the earlier architecture,
compare the forms of all its leading features with those into
which they were corrupted by the Classicalists; and pause, in
the close, on the edge of the precipice of decline, so soon as
I have made its depths discernible. In doing this I shall depend
upon two distinct kinds of evidence:—the first, the testimony
borne by particular incidents and facts to a want of
thought or of feeling in the builders; from which we may conclude
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page026"></SPAN>26</span>
that their architecture must be bad:—the second, the
sense, which I doubt not I shall be able to excite in the reader,
of a systematic ugliness in the architecture itself. Of the first
kind of testimony I shall here give two instances, which may
be immediately useful in fixing in the readers mind the epoch
above indicated for the commencement of decline.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XL</span>. I must again refer to the importance which I have
above attached to the death of Carlo Zeno and the doge Tomaso
Mocenigo. The tomb of that doge is, as I said, wrought by a
Florentine; but it is of the same general type and feeling as all
the Venetian tombs of the period, and it is one of the last
which retains it. The classical element enters largely into its
details, but the feeling of the whole is as yet unaffected. Like
all the lovely tombs of Venice and Verona, it is a sarcophagus
with a recumbent figure above, and this figure is a faithful but
tender portrait, wrought as far as it can be without painfulness,
of the doge as he lay in death. He wears his ducal robe and
bonnet—his head is laid slightly aside upon his pillow—his
hands are simply crossed as they fall. The face is emaciated,
the features large, but so pure and lordly in their natural
chiselling, that they must have looked like marble even in their
animation. They are deeply worn away by thought and
death; the veins on the temples branched and starting; the skin
gathered in sharp folds; the brow high-arched and shaggy; the
eye-ball magnificently large; the curve of the lips just veiled
by the light mustache at the side; the beard short, double, and
sharp-pointed: all noble and quiet; the white sepulchral dust
marking like light the stern angles of the cheek and brow.</p>
<p>This tomb was sculptured in 1424, and is thus described by
one of the most intelligent of the recent writers who represent
the popular feeling respecting Venetian art.</p>
<p class="quote">“Of the Italian school is also the rich but ugly (ricco ma non bel) sarcophagus
in which repose the ashes of Tomaso Mocenigo. It may be called
one of the last links which connect the declining art of the Middle Ages
with that of the Renaissance, which was in its rise. We will not stay to
particularise the defects of each of the seven figures of the front and sides,
which represent the cardinal and theological virtues; nor will we make any
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page027"></SPAN>27</span>
remarks upon those which stand in the niches above the pavilion, because
we consider them unworthy both of the age and reputation of the Florentine
school, which was then with reason considered the most notable in
Italy.”<SPAN name="FnAnchor_24" href="#Footnote_24"><span class="sp">24</span></SPAN></p>
<p>It is well, indeed, not to pause over these defects; but it
might have been better to have paused a moment beside that
noble image of a king’s mortality.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XLI</span>. In the choir of the same church, St. Giov. and
Paolo, is another tomb, that of the Doge Andrea Vendramin.
This doge died in 1478, after a short reign of two years, the
most disastrous in the annals of Venice. He died of a pestilence
which followed the ravage of the Turks, carried to the
shores of the lagoons. He died, leaving Venice disgraced by
sea and land, with the smoke of hostile devastation rising in
the blue distances of Friuli; and there was raised to him the
most costly tomb ever bestowed on her monarchs.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XLII</span>. If the writer above quoted was cold beside the statue
of one of the fathers of his country, he atones for it by his eloquence
beside the tomb of the Vendramin. I must not spoil
the force of Italian superlative by translation.</p>
<p class="quote">“Quando si guarda a quella corretta eleganza di profili e di proporzioni,
a quella squisitezza d’ornamenti, a quel certo sapore antico che senza ombra
d’imitazione traspare da tutta l’opera”—&c. “Sopra ornatissimo zoccolo fornito
di squisiti intagli s’alza uno stylobate”—&c. “Sotto le colonne, il predetto
stilobate si muta leggiadramente in piedistallo, poi con bella novitdi
pensiero e di effetto va coronato da un fregio il pigentile che veder si
possa”—&c. “Non puossi lasciar senza un cenno l’<i>arca dove</i> sta chiuso il
doge; capo lavoro di pensiero e di esecuzione,” &c.</p>
<p>There are two pages and a half of closely printed praise, of
which the above specimens may suffice; but there is not a
word of the statue of the dead from beginning to end. I am
myself in the habit of considering this rather an important part
of a tomb, and I was especially interested in it here, because
Selvatico only echoes the praise of thousands. It is unanimously
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page028"></SPAN>28</span>
declared the chef d’œuvre of Renaissance sepulchral
work, and pronounced by Cicognara (also quoted by Selvatico)</p>
<p class="quote">“Il vertice a cui l’arti Veneziane si spinsero col ministero del scalpello,"—"The
very culminating point to which the Venetian arts attained by ministry
of the chisel.”</p>
<p>To this culminating point, therefore, covered with dust and
cobwebs, I attained, as I did to every tomb of importance in
Venice, by the ministry of such ancient ladders as were to be
found in the sacristan’s keeping. I was struck at first by the
excessive awkwardness and want of feeling in the fall of the
hand towards the spectator, for it is thrown off the middle of
the body in order to show its fine cutting. Now the Mocenigo
hand, severe and even stiff in its articulations, has its
veins finely drawn, its sculptor having justly felt that the delicacy
of the veining expresses alike dignity and age and birth.
The Vendramin hand is far more laboriously cut, but its blunt
and clumsy contour at once makes us feel that all the care has
been thrown away, and well it may be, for it has been entirely
bestowed in cutting gouty wrinkles about the joints. Such as
the hand is, I looked for its fellow. At first I thought it had
been broken off, but, on clearing away the dust, I saw the
wretched effigy had only <i>one</i> hand, and was a mere block on
the inner side. The face, heavy and disagreeable in its features,
is made monstrous by its semi-sculpture. One side of
the forehead is wrinkled elaborately, the other left smooth;
one side only of the doge’s cap is chased; one cheek only is
finished, and the other blocked out and distorted besides;
finally, the ermine robe, which is elaborately imitated to its utmost
lock of hair and of ground hair on the one side, is blocked
out only on the other: it having been supposed throughout the
work that the effigy was only to be seen from below, and from
one side.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XLIII</span>. It was indeed to be so seen by nearly every one; and
I do not blame—I should, on the contrary, have praised—the
sculptor for regulating his treatment of it by its position; if
that treatment had not involved, first, dishonesty, in giving
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page029"></SPAN>29</span>
only half a face, a monstrous mask, when we demanded true
portraiture of the dead; and, secondly, such utter coldness of
feeling, as could only consist with an extreme of intellectual
and moral degradation: Who, with a heart in his breast, could
have stayed his hand as he drew the dim lines of the old man’s
countenance—unmajestic once, indeed, but at least sanctified by
the solemnities of death—could have stayed his hand, as he
reached the bend of the grey forehead, and measured out the
last veins of it at so much the zecchin?</p>
<p>I do not think the reader, if he has feeling, will expect
that much talent should be shown in the rest of his work, by
the sculptor of this base and senseless lie. The whole monument
is one wearisome aggregation of that species of ornamental
flourish, which, when it is done with a pen, is called penmanship,
and when done with a chisel, should be called chiselmanship;
the subject of it being chiefly fat-limbed boys
sprawling on dolphins, dolphins incapable of swimming, and
dragged along the sea by expanded pocket-handkerchiefs.</p>
<p>But now, reader, comes the very gist and point of the
whole matter. This lying monument to a dishonored doge,
this culminating pride of the Renaissance art of Venice, is at
least veracious, if in nothing else, in its testimony to the character
of its sculptor. <i>He was banished from Venice for forgery</i>
in 1487.<SPAN name="FnAnchor_25" href="#Footnote_25"><span class="sp">25</span></SPAN></p>
<p><span class="scs">XLIV</span>. I have more to say about this convict’s work hereafter;
but I pass at present, to the second, slighter, but yet
more interesting piece of evidence, which I promised.</p>
<p>The ducal palace has two principal fa�ades; one towards
the sea, the other towards the Piazzetta. The seaward side, and,
as far as the seventh main arch inclusive, the Piazzetta side, is
work of the early part of the fourteenth century, some of it
perhaps even earlier; while the rest of the Piazzetta side is of
the fifteenth. The difference in age has been gravely disputed
by the Venetian antiquaries, who have examined many documents
on the subject, and quoted some which they never examined.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page030"></SPAN>30</span>
I have myself collated most of the written documents,
and one document more, to which the Venetian antiquaries
never thought of referring,—the masonry of the palace itself.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XLV</span>. That masonry changes at the centre of the eighth
arch from the sea angle on the Piazzetta side. It has been of
comparatively small stones up to that point; the fifteenth century
work instantly begins with larger stones, “brought from
Istria, a hundred miles away.”<SPAN name="FnAnchor_26" href="#Footnote_26"><span class="sp">26</span></SPAN> The ninth shaft from the sea
in the lower arcade, and the seventeenth, which is above it, in
the upper arcade, commence the series of fifteenth century
shafts. These two are somewhat thicker than the others, and
carry the party-wall of the Sala del Scrutinio. Now observe,
reader. The face of the palace, from this point to the Porta
della Carta, was built at the instance of that noble Doge Mocenigo
beside whose tomb you have been standing; at his
instance, and in the beginning of the reign of his successor,
Foscari; that is to say, circa 1424. This is not disputed; it is
only disputed that the sea fa�ade is earlier; of which, however,
the proofs are as simple as they are incontrovertible: for not
only the masonry, but the sculpture, changes at the ninth lower
shaft, and that in the capitals of the shafts both of the upper
and lower arcade: the costumes of the figures introduced in
the sea fa�ade being purely Giottesque, correspondent with
Giotto’s work in the Arena Chapel at Padua, while the costume
on the other capitals is Renaissance-Classic: and the lions’
heads between the arches change at the same point. And there
are a multitude of other evidences in the statues of the angels,
with which I shall not at present trouble the reader.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XLVI</span>. Now, the architect who built under Foscari, in 1424
(remember my date for the decline of Venice, 1418), was
obliged to follow the principal forms of the older palace. But
he had not the wit to invent new capitals in the same style; he
therefore clumsily copied the old ones. The palace has seventeen
main arches on the sea fa�ade, eighteen on the Piazzetta
side, which in all are of course carried by thirty-six pillars;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page031"></SPAN>31</span>
and these pillars I shall always number from right to left, from
the angle of the palace at the Ponte della Paglia to that next
the Porta della Carta. I number them in this succession, because
I thus have the earliest shafts first numbered. So
counted, the 1st, the 18th, and the 36th, are the great supports
of the angles of the palace; and the first of the fifteenth century
series, being, as above stated, the 9th from the sea on the
Piazzetta side, is the 26th of the entire series, and will always
in future be so numbered, so that all numbers above twenty-six
indicate fifteenth century work, and all below it, fourteenth
century, with some exceptional cases of restoration.</p>
<p>Then the copied capitals are: the 28th, copied from the
7th; the 29th, from the 9th; the 30th, from the 10th; the
31st, from the 8th; the <span class="correction" title="originally 33d">33rd</span>, from the 12th; and the 34th,
from the 11th; the others being dull inventions of the 15th
century, except the 36th, which is very nobly designed.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XLVII</span>. The capitals thus selected from the earlier portion
of the palace for imitation, together with the rest, will be accurately
described hereafter; the point I have here to notice is
in the copy of the ninth capital, which was decorated (being,
like the rest, octagonal) with figures of the eight Virtues:—Faith,
Hope, Charity, Justice, Temperance, Prudence, Humility
(the Venetian antiquaries call it Humanity!), and Fortitude.
The Virtues of the fourteenth century are somewhat
hard-featured; with vivid and living expression, and plain
every-day clothes of the time. Charity has her lap full of
apples (perhaps loaves), and is giving one to a little child, who
stretches his arm for it across a gap in the leafage of the capital.
Fortitude tears open a lion’s jaws; Faith lays her hand
on her breast, as she beholds the Cross; and Hope is praying,
while above her a hand is seen emerging from sunbeams—the
hand of God (according to that of Revelations, “The Lord God
giveth them light”); and the inscription above is, “Spes optima
in Deo.”</p>
<p><span class="scs">XLVIII</span>. This design, then, is, rudely and with imperfect
chiselling, imitated by the fifteenth century workmen: the
Virtues have lost their hard features and living expression;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page032"></SPAN>32</span>
they have now all got Roman noses, and have had their hair
curled. Their actions and emblems are, however, preserved
until we come to Hope: she is still praying, but she is praying
to the sun only: <i>The hand of God is gone.</i></p>
<p>Is not this a curious and striking type of the spirit which
had then become dominant in the world, forgetting to see
God’s hand in the light He gave; so that in the issue, when
that light opened into the Reformation, on the one side, and
into full knowledge of ancient literature on the other, the one
was arrested and the other perverted?</p>
<p><span class="scs">XLIX</span>. Such is the nature of the accidental evidence on
which I shall depend for the proof of the inferiority of character
in the Renaissance workmen. But the proof of the inferiority
of the work itself is not so easy, for in this I have to
appeal to judgments which the Renaissance work has itself distorted.
I felt this difficulty very forcibly as I read a slight review
of my former work, “The Seven Lamps,” in “The
Architect:” the writer noticed my constant praise of St.
Mark’s: “Mr. Ruskin thinks it a very beautiful building!
We,” said the Architect, “think it a very ugly building.” I
was not surprised at the difference of opinion, but at the thing
being considered so completely a subject of opinion. My opponents
in matters of painting always assume that there <i>is</i>
such a thing as a law of right, and that I do not understand it:
but my architectural adversaries appeal to no law, they simply
set their opinion against mine; and indeed there is no law at
present to which either they or I can appeal. No man can
speak with rational decision of the merits or demerits of buildings:
he may with obstinacy; he may with resolved adherence
to previous prejudices; but never as if the matter could be
otherwise decided than by a majority of votes, or pertinacity of
partizanship. I had always, however, a clear conviction that
there <i>was</i> a law in this matter: that good architecture might
be indisputably discerned and divided from the bad; that the
opposition in their very nature and essence was clearly visible;
and that we were all of us just as unwise in disputing about
the matter without reference to principle, as we should be for
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page033"></SPAN>33</span>
debating about the genuineness of a coin, without ringing it.
I felt also assured that this law must be universal if it were
conclusive; that it must enable us to reject all foolish and base
work, and to accept all noble and wise work, without reference
to style or national feeling; that it must sanction the design of
all truly great nations and times, Gothic or Greek or Arab;
that it must cast off and reprobate the design of all foolish
nations and times, Chinese or Mexican, or modern European:
and that it must be easily applicable to all possible architectural
inventions of human mind. I set myself, therefore, to
establish such a law, in full belief that men are intended, without
excessive difficulty, and by use of their general common
sense, to know good things from bad; and that it is only because
they will not be at the pains required for the discernment,
that the world is so widely encumbered with forgeries
and basenesses. I found the work simpler than I had hoped;
the reasonable things ranged themselves in the order I required,
and the foolish things fell aside, and took themselves
away so soon as they were looked in the face. I had then,
with respect to Venetian architecture, the choice, either to establish
each division of law in a separate form, as I came to the
features with which it was concerned, or else to ask the reader’s
patience, while I followed out the general inquiry first,
and determined with him a code of right and wrong, to which
we might together make retrospective appeal. I thought this
the best, though perhaps the dullest way; and in these first
following pages I have therefore endeavored to arrange those
foundations of criticism, on which I shall rest in my account of
Venetian architecture, in a form clear and simple enough to be
intelligible even to those who never thought of architecture
before. To those who have, much of what is stated in them
will be well known or self-evident; but they must not be indignant
at a simplicity on which the whole argument depends
for its usefulness. From that which appears a mere truism
when first stated, they will find very singular consequences
sometimes following,—consequences altogether unexpected,
and of considerable importance; I will not pause here to dwell
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page034"></SPAN>34</span>
on their importance, nor on that of the thing itself to be done;
for I believe most readers will at once admit the value of a
criterion of right and wrong in so practical and costly an art as
architecture, and will be apt rather to doubt the possibility of
its attainment than dispute its usefulness if attained. I invite
them, therefore, to a fair trial, being certain that even if I
should fail in my main purpose, and be unable to induce in my
reader the confidence of judgment I desire, I shall at least receive
his thanks for the suggestion of consistent reasons, which
may determine hesitating choice, or justify involuntary preference.
And if I should succeed, as I hope, in making the
Stones of Venice touchstones, and detecting, by the mouldering
of her marble, poison more subtle than ever was betrayed
by the rending of her crystal; and if thus I am enabled to
show the baseness of the schools of architecture and nearly
every other art, which have for three centuries been predominant
in Europe, I believe the result of the inquiry may be serviceable
for proof of a more vital truth than any at which I
have hitherto hinted. For observe: I said the Protestant had
despised the arts, and the Rationalist corrupted them. But
what has the Romanist done meanwhile? He boasts that it
was the papacy which raised the arts; why could it not support
them when it was left to its own strength? How came
it to yield to Classicalism which was based on infidelity, and
to oppose no barrier to innovations, which have reduced the
once faithfully conceived imagery of its worship to stage decoration?
Shall we not rather find that Romanism, instead of
being a promoter of the arts, has never shown itself capable of
a single great conception since the separation of Protestantism
from its side?<SPAN name="FnAnchor_27" href="#Footnote_27"><span class="sp">27</span></SPAN> So long as, corrupt though it might be, no
clear witness had been borne against it, so that it still included
in its ranks a vast number of faithful Christians, so long its arts
were noble. But the witness was borne—the error made apparent;
and Rome, refusing to hear the testimony or forsake
the falsehood, has been struck from that instant with an intellectual
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page035"></SPAN>35</span>
palsy, which has not only incapacitated her from any
further use of the arts which once were her ministers, but has
made her worship the shame of its own shrines, and her worshippers
their destroyers. Come, then, if truths such as these
are worth our thoughts; come, and let us know, before we
enter the streets of the Sea city, whether we are indeed to submit
ourselves to their undistinguished enchantment, and to
look upon the last changes which were wrought on the lifted
forms of her palaces, as we should on the capricious towering
of summer clouds in the sunset, ere they sank into the deep of
night; or whether, rather, we shall not behold in the brightness
of their accumulated marble, pages on which the sentence
of her luxury was to be written until the waves should efface
it, as they fulfilled—“God has numbered thy kingdom, and
finished it.”</p>
<hr class="foot" />
<div class="note">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_1" href="#FnAnchor_1"><span class="fn">1</span></SPAN> <SPAN href="#app_1">Appendix 1</SPAN>, “Foundation of Venice.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_2" href="#FnAnchor_2"><span class="fn">2</span></SPAN> <SPAN href="#app_2">Appendix 2</SPAN>, “Power of the Doges.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_3" href="#FnAnchor_3"><span class="fn">3</span></SPAN> Sismondi, Hist. des R�p. Ital., vol. i. ch. v.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_4" href="#FnAnchor_4"><span class="fn">4</span></SPAN> <SPAN href="#app_3">Appendix 3</SPAN>, “Serrar del Consiglio.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_5" href="#FnAnchor_5"><span class="fn">5</span></SPAN> “Ha saputo trovar modo che non uno, non pochi, non molti, signoreggiano,
ma molti buoni, pochi migliori, e insiememente, <i>un ottimo solo</i>.”
(<i>Sansovino.</i>) Ah, well done, Venice! Wisdom this, indeed.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_6" href="#FnAnchor_6"><span class="fn">6</span></SPAN> Daru, liv. xii. ch. xii.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_7" href="#FnAnchor_7"><span class="fn">7</span></SPAN> Daru, liv. xvi. cap. xx. We owe to this historian the discovery of the
statutes of the tribunal and date of its establishment.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_8" href="#FnAnchor_8"><span class="fn">8</span></SPAN> Ominously signified by their humiliation to the Papal power (as before
to the Turkish) in 1509, and their abandonment of their right of appointing
the clergy of their territories.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_9" href="#FnAnchor_9"><span class="fn">9</span></SPAN> The senate voted the abdication of their authority by a majority of
512 to 14. (Alison, ch. xxiii.)</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_10" href="#FnAnchor_10"><span class="fn">10</span></SPAN> By directing the arms of the Crusaders against a Christian prince.
(Daru, liv. iv. ch. iv. viii.)</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_11" href="#FnAnchor_11"><span class="fn">11</span></SPAN> <SPAN href="#app_4">Appendix 4</SPAN>, “San Pietro di Castello.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_12" href="#FnAnchor_12"><span class="fn">12</span></SPAN> Tomaso Mocenigo, above named, <span class="scs">V</span>.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_13" href="#FnAnchor_13"><span class="fn">13</span></SPAN></p>
<table class="reg" summary="poem"><tr><td>
<div class="poem">
<p><span style="padding-left: 6em; ">“In that temple porch,</span></p>
<p>(The brass is gone, the porphyry remains,)</p>
<p>Did <span class="sc">Barbarossa</span> fling his mantle off,</p>
<p>And kneeling, on his neck receive the foot</p>
<p>Of the proud Pontiff—thus at last consoled</p>
<p>For flight, disguise, and many an aguish shake</p>
<p>On his stone pillow.”</p>
</div>
</td></tr></table>
<p>I need hardly say whence the lines are taken: Rogers’ “Italy” has, I believe,
now a place in the best beloved compartment of all libraries, and will
never be removed from it. There is more true expression of the spirit of
Venice in the passages devoted to her in that poem, than in all else that has
been written of her.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_14" href="#FnAnchor_14"><span class="fn">14</span></SPAN> At least, such success as they had. Vide <SPAN href="#app_5">Appendix 5</SPAN>, “The Papal
Power in Venice.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_15" href="#FnAnchor_15"><span class="fn">15</span></SPAN> The inconsiderable fortifications of the arsenal are no exception to this
statement, as far as it regards the city itself. They are little more than a
semblance of precaution against the attack of a foreign enemy.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_16" href="#FnAnchor_16"><span class="fn">16</span></SPAN> M�moires de Commynes, liv. vii. ch. xviii.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_17" href="#FnAnchor_17"><span class="fn">17</span></SPAN> <SPAN href="#app_6">Appendix 6</SPAN>, “Renaissance Ornaments.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_18" href="#FnAnchor_18"><span class="fn">18</span></SPAN> <SPAN href="#app_7">Appendix 7</SPAN>, “Varieties of the Orders.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_19" href="#FnAnchor_19"><span class="fn">19</span></SPAN> The reader will find the <i>weak</i> points of Byzantine architecture shrewdly
seized, and exquisitely sketched, in the opening chapter of the most delightful
book of travels I ever opened,—Curzon’s “Monasteries of the Levant.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_20" href="#FnAnchor_20"><span class="fn">20</span></SPAN> <SPAN href="#app_8">Appendix 8</SPAN>, “The Northern Energy.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_21" href="#FnAnchor_21"><span class="fn">21</span></SPAN> <SPAN href="#app_9">Appendix 9</SPAN>, “Wooden Churches of the North.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_22" href="#FnAnchor_22"><span class="fn">22</span></SPAN> <SPAN href="#app_10">Appendix 10</SPAN>, “Church of Alexandria.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_23" href="#FnAnchor_23"><span class="fn">23</span></SPAN> <SPAN href="#app_11">Appendix 11</SPAN>, “Renaissance Landscape.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_24" href="#FnAnchor_24"><span class="fn">24</span></SPAN> Selvatico, “Architettura di Venezia,” p. 147.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_25" href="#FnAnchor_25"><span class="fn">25</span></SPAN> Selvatico, p. 221.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_26" href="#FnAnchor_26"><span class="fn">26</span></SPAN> The older work is of Istrian stone also, but of different quality.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_27" href="#FnAnchor_27"><span class="fn">27</span></SPAN> <SPAN href="#app_12">Appendix 12</SPAN>, “Romanist Modern Art.”</p>
</div>
<hr class="art" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page036"></SPAN>36</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />