<h3><SPAN name="chap_10" id="chap_10"></SPAN>CHAPTER X.</h3>
<h5>THE ARCH LINE.</h5>
<p><span class="scs">I</span>. <span class="sc">We</span> have seen in the last section how our means of vertical
support may, for the sake of economy both of space and
material, be gathered into piers or shafts, and directed to the
sustaining of particular points. The next question is how to
connect these points or tops of shafts with each other, so as to
be able to lay on them a continuous roof. This the reader, as
before, is to favor me by finding out for himself, under these
following conditions.</p>
<p>Let <i>s</i>, <i>s</i>, <SPAN href="#fig_29">Fig. XXIX</SPAN>. opposite, be two shafts, with their
capitals ready prepared for their work; and <i>a</i>, <i>b</i>, <i>b</i>, and
<i>c</i>, <i>c</i>, <i>c</i>, be six stones of different sizes, one very long and large,
and two smaller, and three smaller still, of which the reader is
to choose which he likes best, in order to connect the tops of
the shafts.</p>
<p>I suppose he will first try if he can lift the great stone <i>a</i>,
and if he can, he will put it very simply on the tops of the two
pillars, as at A.</p>
<p>Very well indeed: he has done already what a number of
Greek architects have been thought very clever for having
done. But suppose he <i>cannot</i> lift the great stone <i>a</i>, or suppose
I will not give it to him, but only the two smaller stones at
<i>b</i>, <i>b</i>; he will doubtless try to put them up, tilted against each
other, as at <i>d</i>. Very awkward this; worse than card-house
building. But if he cuts off the corners of the stones, so as to
make each of them of the form <i>e</i>, they will stand up very
securely, as at B.</p>
<p>But suppose he cannot lift even these less stones, but can
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page123"></SPAN>123</span>
raise those at <i>c</i>, <i>c</i>, <i>c</i>. Then, cutting each of them into the
form at <i>e</i>, he will doubtless set them up as at <i>f</i>.</p>
<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both; " summary="Illustration">
<tr>
<td class="caption1">Fig. XXIX.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="figcenter2">
<SPAN name="fig_29" id="fig_29"><ANTIMG src="images/img123.jpg" width-obs="500" height-obs="615" alt="Fig. XXIX." title="Fig. XXIX." /></SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><span class="scs">II</span>. This last arrangement looks a little dangerous. Is
there not a chance of the stone in the middle pushing the
others out, or tilting them up and aside, and slipping down
itself between them? There is such a chance: and if by somewhat
altering the form of the stones, we can diminish this
chance, all the better. I must say “we” now, for perhaps I
may have to help the reader a little.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page124"></SPAN>124</span></p>
<p>The danger is, observe, that the midmost stone at <i>f</i> pushes
out the side ones: then if we can give the side ones such a
shape as that, left to themselves, they would fall heavily forward,
they will resist this push <i>out</i> by their weight, exactly in
proportion to their own particular inclination or desire to tumble
<i>in</i>. Take one of them separately, standing up as at <i>g</i>; it
is just possible it may stand up as it is, like the Tower of Pisa:
but we want it to fall forward. Suppose we cut away the
parts that are shaded at <i>h</i> and leave it as at <i>i</i>, it is very certain
it cannot stand alone now, but will fall forward to our entire
satisfaction.</p>
<p>Farther: the midmost stone at <i>f</i> is likely to be troublesome
chiefly by its weight, pushing down between the others; the
more we lighten it the better: so we will cut it into exactly
the same shape as the side ones, chiselling away the shaded
parts, as at <i>h</i>. We shall then have all the three stones <i>k</i>, <i>l</i>, <i>m</i>,
of the same shape; and now putting them together, we have,
at C, what the reader, I doubt not, will perceive at once to be
a much more satisfactory arrangement than that at <i>f</i>.</p>
<p><span class="scs">III</span>. We have now got three arrangements; in one using
only one piece of stone, in the second two, and in the third
three. The first arrangement has no particular name, except
the “horizontal:” but the single stone (or beam, it may be,) is
called a lintel; the second arrangement is called a “Gable;”
the third an “Arch.”</p>
<p>We might have used pieces of wood instead of stone in all
these arrangements, with no difference in plan, so long as the
beams were kept loose, like the stones; but as beams can be
securely nailed together at the ends, we need not trouble ourselves
so much about their shape or balance, and therefore the
plan at <i>f</i> is a peculiarly wooden construction (the reader will
doubtless recognise in it the profile of many a farm-house
roof): and again, because beams are tough, and light, and long,
as compared with stones, they are admirably adapted for the
constructions at A and B, the plain lintel and gable, while that
at C is, for the most part, left to brick and stone.</p>
<p><span class="scs">IV</span>. But farther. The constructions, A, B, and C, though
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page125"></SPAN>125</span>
very conveniently to be first considered as composed of one,
two, and three pieces, are by no means necessarily so. When
we have once cut the stones of the arch into a shape like that
of <i>k</i>, <i>l</i>, and <i>m</i>, they will hold together, whatever their number,
place, or size, as at <i>n</i>; and the great value of the arch is,
that it permits small stones to be used with safety instead of
large ones, which are not always to be had. Stones cut into
the shape of <i>k</i>, <i>l</i>, and <i>m</i>, whether they be short or long (I
have drawn them all sizes at <i>n</i> on purpose), are called Voussoirs;
this is a hard, ugly French name; but the reader will
perhaps be kind enough to recollect it; it will save us both
some trouble: and to make amends for this infliction, I will
relieve him of the term <i>keystone</i>. One voussoir is as much a
keystone as another; only people usually call the stone which
is last put in the keystone; and that one happens generally to
be at the top or middle of the arch.</p>
<p><span class="scs">V</span>. Not only the arch, but even the lintel, may be built of
many stones or bricks. The reader may see lintels built in this
way over most of the windows of our brick London houses, and
so also the gable: there are, therefore, two distinct questions
respecting each arrangement;—First, what is the line or direction
of it, which gives it its strength? and, secondly, what is the
manner of masonry of it, which gives it its consistence? The
first of these I shall consider in this Chapter under the head
of the Arch Line, using the term arch as including all manner
of construction (though we shall have no trouble except
about curves); and in the next Chapter I shall consider the
second, under the head, Arch Masonry.</p>
<p><span class="scs">VI</span>. Now the arch line is the ghost or skeleton of the arch;
or rather it is the spinal marrow of the arch, and the voussoirs
are the vertebr�, which keep it safe and sound, and clothe it.
This arch line the architect has first to conceive and shape in
his mind, as opposed to, or having to bear, certain forces
which will try to distort it this way and that; and against
which he is first to direct and bend the line itself into as strong
resistance as he may, and then, with his voussoirs and what else
he can, to guard it, and help it, and keep it to its duty and in
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page126"></SPAN>126</span>
its shape. So the arch line is the moral character of the arch,
and the adverse forces are its temptations; and the voussoirs,
and what else we may help it with, are its armor and its
motives to good conduct.</p>
<p><span class="scs">VII</span>. This moral character of the arch is called by architects
its “Line of Resistance.” There is a great deal of nicety
in calculating it with precision, just as there is sometimes in
finding out very precisely what is a man’s true line of moral
conduct; but this, in arch morality and in man morality, is a
very simple and easily to be understood principle,—that if
either arch or man expose themselves to their special temptations
or adverse forces, <i>outside</i> of the voussoirs or proper
and appointed armor, both will fall. An arch whose line of
resistance is in the middle of its voussoirs is perfectly safe:
in proportion as the said line runs near the edge of its voussoirs,
the arch is in danger, as the man is who nears temptation; and
the moment the line of resistance emerges out of the voussoirs
the arch falls.</p>
<p><span class="scs">VIII</span>. There are, therefore, properly speaking, two arch
lines. One is the visible direction or curve of the arch, which
may generally be considered as the under edge of its voussoirs,
and which has often no more to do with the real stability of
the arch, than a man’s apparent conduct has with his heart.
The other line, which is the line of resistance, or line of good
behavior, may or may not be consistent with the outward and
apparent curves of the arch; but if not, then the security of
the arch depends simply upon this, whether the voussoirs
which assume or pretend to the one line are wide enough to
include the other.</p>
<p><span class="scs">IX</span>. Now when the reader is told that the line of resistance
varies with every change either in place or quantity of the
weight above the arch, he will see at once that we have no
chance of arranging arches by their moral characters: we can
only take the apparent arch line, or visible direction, as a
ground of arrangement. We shall consider the possible or
probable forms or contours of arches in the present Chapter,
and in the succeeding one the forms of voussoir and other help
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page127"></SPAN>127</span>
which may best fortify these visible lines against every temptation
to lose their consistency.</p>
<table style="float: right; width: auto;" summary="Illustration">
<tr>
<td class="caption1">Fig. XXX.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="figright2">
<SPAN name="fig_30"><ANTIMG src="images/img127.jpg" width-obs="350" height-obs="239" alt="Fig. XXX." title="Fig. XXX." /></SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><span class="scs">X</span>. Look back to <SPAN href="#fig_29">Fig. XXIX.</SPAN> Evidently the abstract or
ghost line of the arrangement at A is a plain horizontal line,
as here at <i>a</i>, <SPAN href="#fig_30">Fig. XXX.</SPAN> The abstract line of the arrangement
at B, <SPAN href="#fig_29">Fig. XXIX.</SPAN>, is composed of two straight lines, set
against each other, as here at <i>b</i>. The abstract line of C,
<SPAN href="#fig_29">Fig. XXIX.</SPAN>, is a curve
of some kind, not at
present determined, suppose
<i>c</i>, <SPAN href="#fig_30">Fig. XXX.</SPAN>
Then, as <i>b</i> is two of the
straight lines at <i>a</i>, set up
against each other, we
may conceive an arrangement,
<i>d</i>, made up of two
of the curved lines at <i>c</i>,
set against each other.
This is called a pointed arch, which is a contradiction in terms:
it ought to be called a curved gable; but it must keep the
name it has got.</p>
<p>Now <i>a</i>, <i>b</i>, <i>c</i>, <i>d</i>, <SPAN href="#fig_30">Fig. XXX.</SPAN>, are the ghosts of the lintel, the
gable, the arch, and the pointed arch. With the poor lintel
ghost we need trouble ourselves no farther; there are no
changes in him: but there is much variety in the other three,
and the method of their variety will be best discerned by
studying <i>b</i> and <i>d</i>, as subordinate to and connected with the
simple arch at <i>c</i>.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XI</span>. Many architects, especially the worst, have been very
curious in designing out of the way arches,—elliptical arches,
and four-centred arches, so called, and other singularities. The
good architects have generally been content, and we for the
present will be so, with God’s arch, the arch of the rainbow
and of the apparent heaven, and which the sun shapes for
us as it sets and rises. Let us watch the sun for a moment as
it climbs: when it is a quarter up, it will give us the arch <i>a</i>,
<SPAN href="#fig_31">Fig. XXXI.</SPAN>; when it is half up, <i>b</i>, and when three quarters
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page128"></SPAN>128</span>
up, <i>c</i>. There will be an infinite number of arches between
these, but we will take these as sufficient representatives of all.
Then <i>a</i> is the low arch, <i>b</i> the central or pure arch, <i>c</i> the high
arch, and the rays of the sun would have drawn for us their
voussoirs.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XII</span>. We will take these several arches successively, and
fixing the top of each accurately, draw two right lines thence
to its base, <i>d</i>, <i>e</i>, <i>f</i>, <SPAN href="#fig_31">Fig. XXXI.</SPAN> Then these lines give us the
relative gables of each of the arches; <i>d</i> is the Italian or
southern gable, <i>e</i> the central gable, <i>f</i> the Gothic gable.</p>
<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both; " summary="Illustration">
<tr>
<td class="caption1">Fig. XXXI.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="figcenter2">
<SPAN name="fig_31"><ANTIMG src="images/img128.jpg" width-obs="500" height-obs="427" alt="Fig. XXXI." title="Fig. XXXI." /></SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><span class="scs">XIII</span>. We will again take the three arches with their
gables in succession, and on each of the sides of the gable,
between it and the arch, we will describe another arch, as at
<i>g</i>, <i>h</i>, <i>i</i>. Then the curves so described give the pointed arches
belonging to each of the round arches; <i>g</i>, the flat pointed
arch, <i>h</i>, the central pointed arch, and <i>i</i>, the lancet pointed
arch.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XIV</span>. If the radius with which these intermediate curves
are drawn be the base of <i>f</i>, the last is the equilateral pointed
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page129"></SPAN>129</span>
arch, one of great importance in Gothic work. But between
the gable and circle, in all the three figures, there are an infinite
number of pointed arches, describable with different radii;
and the three round arches, be it remembered, are themselves
representatives of an infinite number, passing from the flattest
conceivable curve, through the semicircle and horseshoe, up to
the full circle.</p>
<p>The central and the last group are the most important.
The central round, or semicircle, is the Roman, the Byzantine,
and Norman arch; and its relative pointed includes one wide
branch of Gothic. The horseshoe round is the Arabic and
Moorish arch, and its relative pointed includes the whole range
of Arabic and lancet, or Early English and French Gothics.
I mean of course by the relative pointed, the entire group of
which the equilateral arch is the representative.
Between it and the outer horseshoe, as this latter
rises higher, the reader will find, on experiment,
the great families of what may be called the
horseshoe pointed,—curves of the highest importance,
but which are all included, with English
lancet, under the term, relative pointed of the horseshoe arch.</p>
<table style="float: right; width: auto;" summary="Illustration">
<tr>
<td class="caption1">Fig. XXXII.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="figright2">
<SPAN name="fig_32"><ANTIMG src="images/img129.jpg" width-obs="120" height-obs="101" alt="Fig. XXXII." title="Fig. XXXII." /></SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><span class="scs">XV</span>. The groups above described are all formed of circular
arcs, and include all truly useful and beautiful arches for ordinary
work. I believe that singular and complicated curves are
made use of in modern engineering, but with these the general
reader can have no concern: the Ponte della Trinita at Florence
is the most graceful instance I know of such structure; the
arch made use of being very subtle, and approximating to the
low ellipse; for which, in common work, a barbarous pointed
arch, called four-centred, and composed of bits of circles, is
substituted by the English builders. The high ellipse, I believe,
exists in eastern architecture. I have never myself met with
it on a large scale; but it occurs in the niches of the later portions
of the Ducal palace at Venice, together with a singular
hyperbolic arch, <i>a</i> in <SPAN href="#fig_33">Fig. XXXIII.</SPAN>, to be described hereafter:
with such caprices we are not here concerned.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XVI</span>. We are, however, concerned to notice the absurdity
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page130"></SPAN>130</span>
of another form of arch, which, with the four-centred, belongs
to the English perpendicular Gothic.</p>
<p>Taking the gable of any of the groups in <SPAN href="#fig_31">Fig. XXXI.</SPAN>
(suppose the equilateral), here at <i>b</i>, in <SPAN href="#fig_33">Fig. XXXIII.</SPAN>, the
dotted line representing the relative pointed arch, we may
evidently conceive an arch formed by reversed curves on the
inside of the gable, as here shown by the inner curved lines.
I imagine the reader by this time knows enough of the nature
of arches to understand that, whatever strength or stability
was gained by the curve on the <i>outside</i> of the gable, exactly
so much is lost by curves on the <i>inside</i>. The natural tendency
of such an arch to dissolution by its own mere weight renders
it a feature of detestable ugliness, wherever it occurs on a large
scale. It is eminently characteristic of Tudor work, and it is
the profile of the Chinese roof (I say on a large scale, because
this as well as all other capricious arches, may be made secure
by their masonry when small, but not otherwise). Some allowable
modifications of it will be noticed in the chapter on Roofs.</p>
<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both; " summary="Illustration">
<tr>
<td class="caption1">Fig. XXXIII.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="figcenter2">
<SPAN name="fig_33"><ANTIMG src="images/img130.jpg" width-obs="500" height-obs="127" alt="Fig. XXXIII." title="Fig. XXXIII." /></SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><span class="scs">XVII</span>. There is only one more form of arch which we have
to notice. When the last described arch is used, not as the
principal arrangement, but as a mere heading to a common
pointed arch, we have the form <i>c</i>, <SPAN href="#fig_33">Fig. XXXIII.</SPAN> Now this is
better than the entirely reversed arch for two reasons; first,
less of the line is weakened by reversing; secondly, the double
curve has a very high �sthetic value, not existing in the mere
segments of circles. For these reasons arches of this kind are
not only admissible, but even of great desirableness, when
their scale and masonry render them secure, but above a certain
scale they are altogether barbarous; and, with the reversed
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page131"></SPAN>131</span>
Tudor arch, wantonly employed, are the characteristics of the
worst and meanest schools of architecture, past or present.</p>
<p>This double curve is called the Ogee; it is the profile of
many German leaden roofs, of many Turkish domes (there
more excusable, because associated and in sympathy with exquisitely
managed arches of the same line in the walls below),
of Tudor turrets, as in Henry the Seventh’s Chapel, and it is
at the bottom or top of sundry other blunders all over the
world.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XVIII</span>. The varieties of the ogee curve are infinite, as the
reversed portion of it may be engrafted on every other form
of arch, horseshoe, round, or pointed. Whatever is generally
worthy of note in these varieties, and in other arches of
caprice, we shall best discover by examining their masonry; for
it is by their good masonry only that they are rendered either
stable or beautiful. To this question, then, let us address ourselves.</p>
<hr class="art" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page132"></SPAN>132</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />