<p><span class="scs">XVIII</span>. 1. Abstract lines. I have not with lines named
also shades and colors, for this evident reason, that there are
no such things as abstract shadows, irrespective of the forms
which exhibit them, and distinguished in their own nature
from each other; and that the arrangement of shadows, in
greater or less quantity, or in certain harmonical successions,
is an affair of treatment, not of selection. And when we use
abstract colors, we are in fact using a part of nature herself,—using
a quality of her light, correspondent with that of the
air, to carry sound; and the arrangement of color in harmonious
masses is again a matter of treatment, not selection.
Yet even in this separate art of coloring, as referred to architecture,
it is very notable that the best tints are always those
of natural stones. These can hardly be wrong; I think I
never yet saw an offensive introduction of the natural colors of
marble and precious stones, unless in small mosaics, and in one
or two glaring instances of the resolute determination to produce
something ugly at any cost. On the other hand, I have
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page222"></SPAN>222</span>
most assuredly never yet seen a painted building, ancient or
modern, which seemed to me quite right.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XIX</span>. Our first constituents of ornament will therefore be
abstract lines, that is to say, the most frequent contours of
natural objects, transferred to architectural forms when it is
not right or possible to render such forms distinctly imitative.
For instance, the line or curve of the edge of a leaf may be
accurately given to the edge of a stone, without rendering the
stone in the least <i>like</i> a leaf, or suggestive of a leaf; and this
the more fully, because the lines of nature are alike in all her
works; simpler or richer in combination, but the same in
character; and when they are taken out of their combinations
it is impossible to say from which of her works they have been
borrowed, their universal property being that of ever-varying
curvature in the most subtle and subdued transitions, with
peculiar expressions of motion, elasticity, or dependence, which
I have already insisted upon at some length in the chapters on
typical beauty in “Modern Painters.” But, that the reader
may here be able to compare them for himself as deduced from
different sources, I have drawn, as accurately as I can, on the
opposite plate, some ten or eleven lines from natural forms of
very different substances and scale: the first, <i>a b</i>, is in the original,
I think, the most beautiful simple curve I have ever seen in my
life; it is a curve about three quarters of a mile long, formed
by the surface of a small glacier of the second order, on a spur
of the Aiguille de Blaiti�re (Chamouni). I have merely outlined
the crags on the right of it, to show their sympathy and
united action with the curve of the glacier, which is of course
entirely dependent on their opposition to its descent; softened,
however, into unity by the snow, which rarely melts on this
high glacier surface.</p>
<p>The line <i>d c</i> is some mile and a half or two miles long; it is
part of the flank of the chain of the Dent d’Oche above the
lake of Geneva, one or two of the lines of the higher and more
distant ranges being given in combination with it.</p>
<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both; " summary="Illustration">
<tr>
<td class="caption1">VII.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="figcenter">
<SPAN name="plate_7"><ANTIMG src="images/img222.jpg" width-obs="650" height-obs="384" alt="ABSTRACT LINES." title="ABSTRACT LINES." /></SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="caption">ABSTRACT LINES.</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><i>h</i> is a line about four feet long, a branch of spruce fir. I
have taken this tree because it is commonly supposed to be
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page223"></SPAN>223</span>
stiff and ungraceful; its outer sprays are, however, more noble
in their sweep than almost any that I know: but this fragment
is seen at great disadvantage, because placed upside down, in
order that the reader may compare its curvatures with <i>c d</i>, <i>e g</i>,
and <i>i k</i>, which are all mountain lines; <i>e g</i>, about five hundred
feet of the southern edge of the Matterhorn; <i>i k</i>, the entire
slope of the Aiguille Bouchard, from its summit into the valley
of Chamouni, a line some three miles long; <i>l m</i> is the line of
the side of a willow leaf traced by laying the leaf on the paper;
<i>n o</i>, one of the innumerable groups of curves at the lip of a
paper Nautilus; <i>p</i>, a spiral, traced on the paper round a Serpula;
<i>q r</i>, the leaf of the Alisma Plantago with its interior
ribs, real size; <i>s t</i>, the side of a bay-leaf; <i>u w</i>, of a salvia leaf;
and it is to be carefully noted that these last curves, being
never intended by nature to be seen singly, are more heavy and
less agreeable than any of the others which would be seen as
independent lines. But all agree in their character of changeful
curvature, the mountain and glacier lines only excelling the
rest in delicacy and richness of transition.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XX</span>. Why lines of this kind are beautiful, I endeavored to
show in the “Modern Painters;” but one point, there omitted,
may be mentioned here,—that almost all these lines are expressive
of action of <i>force</i> of some kind, while the circle is a line
of limitation or support. In leafage they mark the forces of
its growth and expansion, but some among the most beautiful
of them are described by bodies variously in motion, or subjected
to force; as by projectiles in the air, by the particles of
water in a gentle current, by planets in motion in an orbit, by
their satellites, if the actual path of the satellite in space be
considered instead of its relation to the planet; by boats, or
birds, turning in the water or air, by clouds in various action
upon the wind, by sails in the curvatures they assume under its
force, and by thousands of other objects moving or bearing
force. In the Alisma leaf, <i>q r</i>, the lines through its body,
which are of peculiar beauty, mark the different expansions of
its fibres, and are, I think, exactly the same as those which
would be traced by the currents of a river entering a lake of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page224"></SPAN>224</span>
the shape of the leaf, at the end where the stalk is, and passing
out at its point. Circular curves, on the contrary, are always,
I think, curves of limitation or support; that is to say, curves
of perfect rest. The cylindrical curve round the stem of a
plant binds its fibres together; while the <i>ascent</i> of the stem is
in lines of various curvature: so the curve of the horizon and
of the apparent heaven, of the rainbow, etc.: and though the
reader might imagine that the circular orbit of any moving
body, or the curve described by a sling, was a curve of motion,
he should observe that the circular character is given to the
curve not by the motion, but by the confinement: the circle is
the consequence not of the energy of the body, but of its being
forbidden to leave the centre; and whenever the whirling or
circular motion can be fully impressed on it we obtain instant
balance and rest with respect to the centre of the circle.</p>
<p>Hence the peculiar fitness of the circular curve as a sign of
rest, and security of support, in arches; while the other curves,
belonging especially to action, are to be used in the more active
architectural features—the hand and foot (the capital and base),
and in all minor ornaments; more freely in proportion to their
independence of structural conditions.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXI</span>. We need not, however, hope to be able to imitate,
in general work, any of the subtly combined curvatures of
nature’s highest designing: on the contrary, their extreme
refinement renders them unfit for coarse service or material.
Lines which are lovely in the pearly film of the Nautilus shell,
are lost in the grey roughness of stone; and those which are
sublime in the blue of far away hills, are weak in the substance
of incumbent marble. Of all the graceful lines assembled on
<SPAN href="#plate_7">Plate VII.</SPAN>, we shall do well to be content with two of the simplest.
We shall take one mountain line (<i>e g</i>) and one leaf line
(<i>u w</i>), or rather fragments of them, for we shall perhaps not
want them all. I will mark off from <i>u w</i> the little bit <i>x y</i>, and
from <i>e g</i> the piece <i>e f</i>; both which appear to me likely to be
serviceable: and if hereafter we need the help of any abstract
lines, we will see what we can do with these only.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXII</span>. 2. Forms of Earth (Crystals). It may be asked why
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page225"></SPAN>225</span>
I do not say rocks or mountains? Simply, because the nobility
of these depends, first, on their scale, and, secondly, on accident.
Their scale cannot be represented, nor their accident
systematised. No sculptor can in the least imitate the peculiar
character of accidental fracture: he can obey or exhibit the
laws of nature, but he cannot copy the felicity of her fancies,
nor follow the steps of her fury. The very glory of a mountain
is in the revolutions which raised it into power, and the
forces which are striking it into ruin. But we want no cold
and careful imitation of catastrophe; no calculated mockery of
convulsion; no delicate recommendation of ruin. We are to
follow the labor of Nature, but not her disturbance; to imitate
what she has deliberately ordained,<SPAN name="FnAnchor_64" href="#Footnote_64"><span class="sp">64</span></SPAN> not what she has violently
suffered, or strangely permitted. The only uses, therefore, of
rock form which are wise in the architect, are its actual introduction
(by leaving untouched such blocks as are meant for
rough service), and that noble use of the general examples of
mountain structure of which I have often heretofore spoken.
Imitations of rock form have, for the most part, been confined
to periods of degraded feeling and to architectural toys or
pieces of dramatic effect,—the Calvaries and holy sepulchres of
Romanism, or the grottoes and fountains of English gardens.
They were, however, not unfrequent in medi�val bas-reliefs;
very curiously and elaborately treated by Ghiberti on the doors
of Florence, and in religious sculpture necessarily introduced
wherever the life of the anchorite was to be expressed. They
were rarely introduced as of ornamental character, but for
particular service and expression; we shall see an interesting
example in the Ducal Palace at Venice.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXIII</span>. But against crystalline form, which is the completely
systematised natural structure of the earth, none of
these objections hold good, and, accordingly, it is an endless
element of decoration, where higher conditions of structure
cannot be represented. The four-sided pyramid, perhaps the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page226"></SPAN>226</span>
most frequent of all natural crystals, is called in architecture
a dogtooth; its use is quite limitless, and always beautiful: the
cube and rhomb are almost equally frequent in chequers and
dentils: and all mouldings of the middle Gothic are little more
than representations of the canaliculated crystals of the beryl,
and such other minerals:</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXIV</span>. Not knowingly. I do not suppose a single hint
was ever actually taken from mineral form; not even by the
Arabs in their stalactite pendants and vaults: all that I mean
to allege is, that beautiful ornament, wherever found, or however
invented, is always either an intentional or unintentional
copy of some constant natural form; and that in this particular
instance, the pleasure we have in these geometrical figures
of our own invention, is dependent for all its acuteness on the
natural tendency impressed on us by our Creator to love the
forms into which the earth He gave us to tread, and out of
which He formed our bodies, knit itself as it was separated
from the deep.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXV</span>. 3. Forms of Water (Waves).</p>
<p>The reasons which prevent rocks from being used for ornament
repress still more forcibly the portraiture of the sea.
Yet the constant necessity of introducing some representation
of water in order to explain the scene of events, or as a sacred
symbol, has forced the sculptors of all ages to the invention of
some type or letter for it, if not an actual imitation. We
find every degree of conventionalism or of naturalism in these
types, the earlier being, for the most part, thoughtful symbols;
the latter, awkward attempts at portraiture.<SPAN name="FnAnchor_65" href="#Footnote_65"><span class="sp">65</span></SPAN> The most conventional
of all types is the Egyptian zigzag, preserved in the
astronomical sign of Aquarius; but every nation, with any
capacities of thought, has given, in some of its work, the same
great definition of open water, as “an undulatory thing with
fish in it.” I say <i>open</i> water, because inland nations have a
totally different conception of the element. Imagine for an instant
the different feelings of an husbandman whose hut is built
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page227"></SPAN>227</span>
by the Rhine or the Po, and who sees, day by day, the same
giddy succession of silent power, the same opaque, thick, whirling,
irresistible labyrinth of rushing lines and twisted eddies,
coiling themselves into serpentine race by the reedy banks, in
omne volubilis �vum,—and the image of the sea in the mind
of the fisher upon the rocks of Ithaca, or by the Straits of
Sicily, who sees how, day by day, the morning winds come
coursing to the shore, every breath of them with a green wave
rearing before it; clear, crisp, ringing, merry-minded waves,
that fall over and over each other, laughing like children as
they near the beach, and at last clash themselves all into dust
of crystal over the dazzling sweeps of sand. Fancy the difference
of the image of water in those two minds, and then compare
the sculpture of the coiling eddies of the Tigris and its
reedy branches in those slabs of Nineveh, with the crested
curls of the Greek sea on the coins of Camerina or Tarentum.
But both agree in the undulatory lines, either of the currents
or the surface, and in the introduction of fish as explanatory of
the meaning of those lines (so also the Egyptians in their
frescoes, with most elaborate realisation of the fish). There is
a very curious instance on a Greek mirror in the British
Museum, representing Orion on the Sea; and multitudes of
examples with dolphins on the Greek vases: the type is preserved
without alteration in medi�val painting and sculpture.
The sea in that Greek mirror (at least 400 <span class="scs">B.C.</span>), in the mosaics
of Torcello and St. Mark’s, on the font of St. Frediano at
Lucca, on the gate of the fortress of St. Michael’s Mount in
Normandy, on the Bayeux tapestry, and on the capitals of the
Ducal Palace at Venice (under Arion on his Dolphin), is represented
in a manner absolutely identical. Giotto, in the
frescoes of Avignon, has, with his usual strong feeling for
naturalism, given the best example I remember, in painting, of
the unity of the conventional system with direct imitation, and
that both in sea and river; giving in pure blue color the
coiling whirlpool of the stream, and the curled crest of the
breaker. But in all early sculptural examples, both imitation
and decorative effect are subordinate to easily understood symbolical
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page228"></SPAN>228</span>
language; the undulatory lines are often valuable as an
enrichment of surface, but are rarely of any studied gracefulness.
One of the best examples I know of their expressive
arrangement is around some figures in a spandril at Bourges,
representing figures sinking in deep sea (the deluge): the waved
lines yield beneath the bodies and wildly lave the edge of the
moulding, two birds, as if to mark the reverse of all order of
nature, lowest of all sunk in the depth of them. In later times
of debasement, water began to be represented with its waves,
foam, etc., as on the Vendramin tomb at Venice, above cited;
but even there, without any definite ornamental purpose, the
sculptor meant partly to explain a story, partly to display dexterity
of chiselling, but not to produce beautiful forms pleasant
to the eye. The imitation is vapid and joyless, and it has often
been matter of surprise to me that sculptors, so fond of exhibiting
their skill, should have suffered this imitation to fall so
short, and remain so cold,—should not have taken more pains
to curl the waves clearly, to edge them sharply, and to express,
by drill-holes or other artifices, the character of foam.
I think in one of the Antwerp churches something of this kind
is done in wood, but in general it is rare.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXVI</span>. 4. Forms of Fire (Flames and Rays). If neither
the sea nor the rock can be imagined, still less the devouring
fire. It has been symbolised by radiation both in painting and
sculpture, for the most part in the latter very unsuccessfully.
It was suggested to me, not long ago,<SPAN name="FnAnchor_66" href="#Footnote_66"><span class="sp">66</span></SPAN> that zigzag decorations
of Norman architects were typical of light springing from the
half-set orb of the sun; the resemblance to the ordinary sun
type is indeed remarkable, but I believe accidental. I shall
give you, in my large plates, two curious instances of radiation
in brick ornament above arches, but I think these also without
any very luminous intention. The imitations of fire in the
torches of Cupids and genii, and burning in tops of urns, which
attest and represent the mephitic inspirations of the seventeenth
century in most London churches, and in monuments all over
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page229"></SPAN>229</span>
civilised Europe, together with the gilded rays of Romanist
altars, may be left to such mercy as the reader is inclined to
show them.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXVII</span>. 5. Forms of Air (Clouds). Hardly more manageable
than flames, and of no ornamental use, their majesty being
in scale and color, and inimitable in marble. They are lightly
traced in much of the cinque cento sculpture; very boldly and
grandly in the strange Last Judgment in the porch of St.
Maclou at Rouen, described in the “Seven Lamps.” But the
most elaborate imitations are altogether of recent date, arranged
in concretions like flattened sacks, forty or fifty feet above the
altars of continental churches, mixed with the gilded truncheons
intended for sunbeams above alluded to.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXVIII</span>. 6. Shells. I place these lowest in the scale (after
inorganic forms) as being moulds or coats of organism; not
themselves organic. The sense of this, and of their being mere
emptiness and deserted houses, must always prevent them, however
beautiful in their lines, from being largely used in ornamentation.
It is better to take the line and leave the shell.
One form, indeed, that of the cockle, has been in all ages used
as the decoration of half domes, which were named conchas
from their shell form: and I believe the wrinkled lip of the
cockle, so used, to have been the origin, in some parts of
Europe at least, of the exuberant foliation of the round arch.
The scallop also is a pretty radiant form, and mingles well with
other symbols when it is needed. The crab is always as delightful
as a grotesque, for here we suppose the beast inside the
shell; and he sustains his part in a lively manner among the
other signs of the zodiac, with the scorpion; or scattered upon
sculptured shores, as beside the Bronze Boar of Florence. We
shall find him in a basket at Venice, at the base of one of the
Piazzetta shafts.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXIX</span>. 7. Fish. These, as beautiful in their forms as they
are familiar to our sight, while their interest is increased by
their symbolic meaning, are of great value as material of ornament.
Love of the picturesque has generally induced a choice
of some supple form with scaly body and lashing tail, but the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page230"></SPAN>230</span>
simplest fish form is largely employed in medi�val work. We
shall find the plain oval body and sharp head of the Thunny
constantly at Venice; and the fish used in the expression of
sea-water, or water generally, are always plain bodied creatures
in the best medi�val sculpture. The Greek type of the
dolphin, however, sometimes but slightly exaggerated from the
real outline of the Delphinus Delphis,<SPAN name="FnAnchor_67" href="#Footnote_67"><span class="sp">67</span></SPAN> is one of the most picturesque
of animal forms; and the action of its slow revolving
plunge is admirably caught upon the surface sea represented
in Greek vases.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXX</span>. 8. Reptiles and Insects. The forms of the serpent
and lizard exhibit almost every element of beauty and horror
in strange combination; the horror, which in an imitation is
felt only as a pleasurable excitement, has rendered them favorite
subjects in all periods of art; and the unity of both lizard
and serpent in the ideal dragon, the most picturesque and
powerful of all animal forms, and of peculiar symbolical interest
to the Christian mind, is perhaps the principal of all the
materials of medi�val picturesque sculpture. By the best
sculptors it is always used with this symbolic meaning, by the
cinque cento sculptors as an ornament merely. The best and
most natural representations of mere viper or snake are to be
found interlaced among their confused groups of meaningless
objects. The real power and horror of the snake-head has,
however, been rarely reached. I shall give one example from
Verona of the twelfth century.</p>
<p>Other less powerful reptile forms are not unfrequent.
Small frogs, lizards, and snails almost always enliven the foregrounds
and leafage of good sculpture. The tortoise is less
usually employed in groups. Beetles are chiefly mystic and
colossal. Various insects, like everything else in the world,
occur in cinque cento work; grasshoppers most frequently.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page231"></SPAN>231</span>
We shall see on the Ducal Palace at Venice an interesting use
of the bee.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXXI</span>. 9. Branches and stems of Trees. I arrange these
under a separate head; because, while the forms of leafage
belong to all architecture, and ought to be employed in it
always, those of the branch and stem belong to a peculiar
imitative and luxuriant architecture, and are only applicable
at times. Pagan sculptors seem to have perceived little beauty
in the stems of trees; they were little else than timber to
them; and they preferred the rigid and monstrous triglyph, or
the fluted column, to a broken bough or gnarled trunk. But
with Christian knowledge came a peculiar regard for the forms
of vegetation, from the root upwards. The actual representation
of the entire trees required in many scripture subjects,—as
in the most frequent of Old Testament subjects, the Fall;
and again in the Drunkenness of Noah, the Garden Agony,
and many others, familiarised the sculptors of bas-relief to the
beauty of forms before unknown; while the symbolical name
given to Christ by the Prophets, “the Branch,” and the frequent
expressions referring to this image throughout every
scriptural description of conversion, gave an especial interest
to the Christian mind to this portion of vegetative structure.
For some time, nevertheless, the sculpture of trees was confined
to bas-relief; but it at last affected even the treatment of
the main shafts in Lombard Gothic buildings,—as in the
western fa�ade of Genoa, where two of the shafts are represented
as gnarled trunks: and as bas-relief itself became more
boldly introduced, so did tree sculpture, until we find the
writhed and knotted stems of the vine and fig used for angle
shafts on the Doge’s Palace, and entire oaks and appletrees
forming, roots and all, the principal decorative sculptures of
the Scala tombs at Verona. It was then discovered to be more
easy to carve branches than leaves and, much helped by the
frequent employment in later Gothic of the “Tree of Jesse,”
for traceries and other purposes, the system reached full developement
in a perfect thicket of twigs, which form the richest
portion of the decoration of the porches of Beauvais. It
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page232"></SPAN>232</span>
had now been carried to its richest extreme: men wearied of
it and abandoned it, and like all other natural and beautiful
things, it was ostracised by the mob of Renaissance architects.
But it is interesting to observe how the human mind, in its
acceptance of this feature of ornament, proceeded from the
ground, and followed, as it were, the natural growth of the
tree. It began with the rude and solid trunk, as at Genoa;
then the branches shot out, and became loaded leaves; autumn
came, the leaves were shed, and the eye was directed to the
extremities of the delicate branches;—the Renaissance frosts
came, and all perished.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXXII</span>. 10. Foliage, Flowers, and Fruit. It is necessary
to consider these as separated from the stems; not only, as
above noted, because their separate use marks another school
of architecture, but because they are the only organic structures
which are capable of being so treated, and intended to be
so, without strong effort of imagination. To pull animals to
pieces, and use their paws for feet of furniture, or their heads
for terminations of rods and shafts, is <i>usually</i> the characteristic
of feelingless schools; the greatest men like their animals
whole. The head may, indeed, be so managed as to look
emergent from the stone, rather than fastened to it; and
wherever there is throughout the architecture any expression
of sternness or severity (severity in its literal sense, as in
Romans, <span class="scs">XI</span>. 22), such divisions of the living form may be
permitted; still, you cannot cut an animal to pieces as you can
gather a flower or a leaf. These were intended for our gathering,
and for our constant delight: wherever men exist in a
perfectly civilised and healthy state, they have vegetation
around them; wherever their state approaches that of innocence
or perfectness, it approaches that of Paradise,—it is a
dressing of garden. And, therefore, where nothing else can
be used for ornament, vegetation may; vegetation in any
form, however fragmentary, however abstracted. A single
leaf laid upon the angle of a stone, or the mere form or frame-work
of the leaf drawn upon it, or the mere shadow and ghost
of the leaf,—the hollow “foil” cut out of it,—possesses a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page233"></SPAN>233</span>
charm which nothing else can replace; a charm not exciting,
nor demanding laborious thought or sympathy, but perfectly
simple, peaceful, and satisfying.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXXIII</span>. The full recognition of leaf forms, as the general
source of subordinate decoration, is one of the chief characteristics
of Christian architecture; but the two <i>roots</i> of leaf
ornament are the Greek acanthus, and the Egyptian lotus.<SPAN name="FnAnchor_68" href="#Footnote_68"><span class="sp">68</span></SPAN>
The dry land and the river thus each contributed their part;
and all the florid capitals of the richest Northern Gothic on
the one hand, and the arrowy lines of the severe Lombardic
capitals on the other, are founded on these two gifts of the
dust of Greece and the waves of the Nile. The leaf which is,
I believe, called the Persepolitan water-leaf, is to be associated
with the lotus flower and stem, as the origin of our noblest
types of simple capital; and it is to be noted that the florid
leaves of the dry land are used most by the Northern architects,
while the water leaves are gathered for their ornaments
by the parched builders of the Desert.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXXIV</span>. Fruit is, for the most part, more valuable in color
than form; nothing is more beautiful as a subject of sculpture
on a tree; but, gathered and put in baskets, it is quite possible
to have too much of it. We shall find it so used very dextrously
on the Ducal Palace of Venice, there with a meaning
which rendered it right necessary; but the Renaissance architects
address themselves to spectators who care for nothing
but feasting, and suppose that clusters of pears and pineapples
are visions of which their imagination can never weary, and
above which it will never care to rise. I am no advocate for
image worship, as I believe the reader will elsewhere sufficiently
find; but I am very sure that the Protestantism of
London would have found itself quite as secure in a cathedral
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page234"></SPAN>234</span>
decorated with statues of good men, as in one hung round
with bunches of ribston pippins.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXXV</span>. 11. Birds. The perfect and simple grace of bird
form, in general, has rendered it a favorite subject with early
sculptors, and with those schools which loved form more than
action; but the difficulty of expressing action, where the muscular
markings are concealed, has limited the use of it in later
art. Half the ornament, at least, in Byzantine architecture,
and a third of that of Lombardic, is composed of birds, either
pecking at fruit or flowers, or standing on either side of a
flower or vase, or alone, as generally the symbolical peacock.
But how much of our general sense of grace or power of
motion, of serenity, peacefulness, and spirituality, we owe to
these creatures, it is impossible to conceive; their wings supplying
us with almost the only means of representation of spiritual
motion which we possess, and with an ornamental form of
which the eye is never weary, however meaninglessly or endlessly
repeated; whether in utter isolation, or associated with
the bodies of the lizard, the horse, the lion, or the man. The
heads of the birds of prey are always beautiful, and used as the
richest ornaments in all ages.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XXXVI</span>. 12. Quadrupeds and Men. Of quadrupeds the
horse has received an elevation into the primal rank of sculptural
subject, owing to his association with men. The full
value of other quadruped forms has hardly been perceived, or
worked for, in late sculpture; and the want of science is more
felt in these subjects than in any other branches of early work.
The greatest richness of quadruped ornament is found in the
hunting sculpture of the Lombards; but rudely treated (the
most noble examples of treatment being the lions of Egypt,
the Ninevite bulls, and the medi�val griffins). Quadrupeds
of course form the noblest subjects of ornament next to the
human form; this latter, the chief subject of sculpture, being
sometimes the end of architecture rather than its decoration.</p>
<p>We have thus completed the list of the materials of architectural
decoration, and the reader may be assured that no
effort has ever been successful to draw elements of beauty from
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page235"></SPAN>235</span>
any other sources than these. Such an effort was once resolutely
made. It was contrary to the religion of the Arab to
introduce any animal form into his ornament; but although
all the radiance of color, all the refinements of proportion, and
all the intricacies of geometrical design were open to him, he
could not produce any noble work without an <i>abstraction</i> of
the forms of leafage, to be used in his capitals, and made the
ground plan of his chased ornament. But I have above noted
that coloring is an entirely distinct and independent art; and
in the “Seven Lamps” we saw that this art had most power
when practised in arrangements of simple geometrical form:
the Arab, therefore, lay under no disadvantage in coloring,
and he had all the noble elements of constructive and proportional
beauty at his command: he might not imitate the sea-shell,
but he could build the dome. The imitation of radiance
by the variegated voussoir, the expression of the sweep of the
desert by the barred red lines upon the wall, the starred inshedding
of light through his vaulted roof, and all the endless
fantasy of abstract line,<SPAN name="FnAnchor_69" href="#Footnote_69"><span class="sp">69</span></SPAN> were still in the power of his ardent
and fantastic spirit. Much he achieved; and yet in the effort
of his overtaxed invention, restrained from its proper food, he
made his architecture a glittering vacillation of undisciplined
enchantment, and left the lustre of its edifices to wither like a
startling dream, whose beauty we may indeed feel, and whose
instruction we may receive, but must smile at its inconsistency,
and mourn over its evanescence.</p>
<hr class="foot" />
<div class="note">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_63" href="#FnAnchor_63"><span class="fn">63</span></SPAN> The admiration of Canova I hold to be one of the most deadly symptoms
in the civilisation of the upper classes in the present century.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_64" href="#FnAnchor_64"><span class="fn">64</span></SPAN> Thus above, I adduced for the architect’s imitation the appointed stories
and beds of the Matterhorn, not its irregular forms of crag or fissure.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_65" href="#FnAnchor_65"><span class="fn">65</span></SPAN> <SPAN href="#app_21">Appendix 21</SPAN>, “Ancient Representations of Water.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_66" href="#FnAnchor_66"><span class="fn">66</span></SPAN> By the friend to whom I owe <SPAN href="#app_21">Appendix 21</SPAN>.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_67" href="#FnAnchor_67"><span class="fn">67</span></SPAN> One is glad to hear from Cuvier, that though dolphins in general are
“les plus carnassiers, et proportion gard�e avec leur taille, les plus cruels
de l’ordre;” yet that in the Delphinus Delphis, “tout l’organisation de son
cerveau annonce <i>qu’il ne doit pas �tre d�pourvu de la docilit�</i> qu’ils (les
anciens) lui attribuaient.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_68" href="#FnAnchor_68"><span class="fn">68</span></SPAN> Vide Wilkinson, vol. v., woodcut No. 478, fig. 8. The tamarisk appears
afterwards to have given the idea of a subdivision of leaf more pure
and quaint than that of the acanthus. Of late our botanists have discovered,
in the “Victoria regia” (supposing its blossom reversed), another
strangely beautiful type of what we may perhaps hereafter find it convenient
to call <i>Lily</i> capitals.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_69" href="#FnAnchor_69"><span class="fn">69</span></SPAN> <SPAN href="#app_22">Appendix 22</SPAN>, “Arabian Ornamentation.”</p>
</div>
<hr class="art" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page236"></SPAN>236</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />