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tecnm:benedicta tu inter mulieres: |
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etecce concinieg inntero et paries ftlinm:
et^ocabis nomen eius Tjefum: |
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Tfte annunciation: part of amural
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painting by Ijenry Iftoliday in tbe
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Cbancel of ail S flints' Cbnrcb:jotting
Tjill: William ti?bite:f &a: arcbltectJ |
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jEDINlSIJJSGJfcg®!
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I 1/ iXCXXj {
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A HISTORY
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[ASSOCIATION: M \
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OF
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fllE GOTHIC RKV1VAL
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AN ATTEMPT TO SHOW HOW
THE TASTE FOR MEDIAEVAL ARCHITECTURE WHICH LINGERED IN ENGLAND DURING THE TWO LAST CENTURIES HAS SINCE BEEN ENCOURAGED AND DEVELOPED ' |
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BY
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CIIARL E S L. E A S T L A K E
F.R.I.B.A., ARCHITECT
AUTHOR OF 'HINTS ON HOUSEHOLD TASTE* |
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' Sic ijolvenda ictas conimuiat tempora renim,
Quod fait in prctio, fit nullo deniquc honore; Porro aiind succedit, el e contemtibus exit, Inque dies magis appettinr, floretque repcrtuiii Laudibus% et iniro est morialeis inter honore ' |
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Lucretius
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LONDON
LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO. 1872
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PREFACE.
/
If any preface to this book be needed, it should perhaps
take the form of an ample apology for the time which has elapsed between its original announcement and its publica- tion. During that interval, and in such leisure as more urgent duties left at my disposal, I gradually realised the difficulties of the task which I had undertaken. It has been said of contemporary history that its events
are less easy to ascertain with accuracy than those of past time. For my own part, and in reference to this work, I can testify to the fact that much information which I imagined might be obtained for the asking has cost me more trouble to procure than that which required literary research. As it is, I fear that the following pages will be found
deficient in many details, the omission of which I regret, not because it affects in any material degree the thread of my narrative, but because in describing works of equal merit or importance I had hoped to bestow an equal atten- tion on each, and this, in the absence of necessary particulars respecting some of them, has not always been possible. |
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vi Preface.
If I have not ventured to dwell at any length on the
present prospects of the Revival, or attempted to enter into details respecting the application of Mediaeval design to the specific requirements of domestic and ecclesiastical architecture, it is from a conviction that I could add little or nothing to what has been already said on these points. Mr. G. G. Scott's * Remarks on Secular and Domestic Archi- tecture,' and Mr. Beresford-Hope's ' English Cathedral of the Nineteenth Century,' are works so exhaustive in their nature, and so practical in their aim, that they leave scarcely a plea to urge or a suggestion to advance in the interest of modern Gothic. My own object, as will be seen, is of a different kind.
For some years past it has seemed to me that the causes
which brought about, and the events wThich attended, one of the most remarkable revolutions in national art that this country has seen were worthy of some record, if only to serve as a link between the past and future history of English Architecture. In attempting to supply this record, it was my intention from the first to chronicle facts rather than offer criticisms, and where I have departed from this rule it has been for the most part in the case of works which illustrate some marked change in the progress of the Revival. I felt, as my book advanced, that technical descriptions
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Preface. vii
of even noteworthy buildings would, if frequently repeated,
become tedious to the unprofessional reader. For this reason I have in the majority of instances confined such descriptions to the Tabulated List appended to this volume, in which will be found a selection from the most remarkable structures of a Mediaeval character erected by various architects during the last fifty years, chronologically arranged. In the choice of these examples I have been guided by
various considerations ; the date of a building, its local influ- ence on public taste, or the novel character of its design frequently rendering it, in relation to my purpose, an object of greater interest than many others of more intrinsic import- ance. This explanation will, I trust, be sufficient to account for the absence of many works of acknowledged excellence from my List, which, as it is, has reached a length far beyond what I had anticipated when I began to compile it. Little or no mention has been made of ' Restorations '—
partly because it would have been difficult to draw a definite line between those which have been a simple repair of old buildings, and others which have required archaeological skill in execution, but chiefly because in either case such works cannot be said to represent, except indirectly, the genuine progress of modern architecture. The large proportion of engravings which illustrate build-
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viii Preface.
ings erected between i860 and 1870 as compared with those
of former years has prevented their even distribution over the volume. This is hardly satisfactory,, but it will probably be considered a less evil than the only possible alternative, viz. their separation from the text to which they relate. I may here observe that the size of these woodcuts does not permit them, though very fairly executed, to convey more than a general idea of the designs represented., and that, like photo- graphic portraits, they never flatter the original. If my readers will kindly remember this, I make no doubt that the architects concerned will be equally indulgent. To the Editor of the ' Building News ' I am indebted for
permission to incorporate with this volume a small portion of its contents, which originally appeared in that journal. To many friends, who have kindly helped me with information and suggestions, my best acknowledgments are due for their assistance and advice. Charles L. Eastlake.
6 Upper Berkeley Street West,
Hyde Park, W. |
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CONTENTS.
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CHAPTER I.
Ancient and Modern Art—Effect of Civilisation—Decline of Mediaeval Art—Elizabethan
Architecture—Dodsworth and Dugdale—The ' Monasticon Anglicanum'—Hollar and King—Illustrations of the ' Monasticon '—Inigo Jones—Archbishop Laud—Durham Churches —Sir Henry Wotton—Antiquaries of the Seventeenth Century—Dugdale's 'History of St. Paul's'—Old St. Paul's Italianised—Royal Commission on the Cathe- dral—The Fire of London ...... pages 1-19 CHAPTER II.
Anthony a Wood—The *Athenae Oxonienses'—Transition of Style—Sir Christopher
Wren—His Report on Salisbury Cathedral—Seventeenth Century Gothic—Works at Oxford—Thomas Holt—Seventeenth Century Buildings at Oxford—University College—Tom Tower, Christchurch—Brasenose College—Charles Church, Plymouth —Old and New St. Paul's—Wren's Work at Westminster—St. Mary Aldermary— St. Dunstan's-in-the-East—St. Michael's, Cornhill—Death of Wren . 20-41 CHAPTER III.
Horace Walpole—His Taste for Gothic—Strawberry Hill—Description of the Building—
Character of Walpole's Gothic—Pedantry of the Renaissance—Batty Langley— Gothic Architecture * improved '—The Five Orders Gothicised—Batty Langley's Designs ......... 42-54 CHAPTER IV.
The Georgian Era—Additions'to Hampton Court—Eighteenth Century Gothic—Costessy
Hall, Norfolk—The Revival in Scotland—William Beckford—Fonthill Abbey- Literature of the Revival—Grose's * Antiquities of England and Wales'__Carter's Works—Hearne's 'Antiquities of Great Britain'—Cough's 'Sepulchral Monuments'
Bentham and Willis—Their 'History of Gothic and Saxon Architecture' . 55-71 |
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x Contents.
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CHAPTER V.
Difficulties of Classification—The Works of Nash and James Wyatt—Country Mansions
—Belvoir Castle—Elvaston Hall—Donnington Hall—Hawarden Castle—Ditton Park—Eaton Hall—Seldon House—Eastnor Castle—Sir Robert Smirke—John Britton—His early Life and Literary Career—The 'Beauties of Wiltshire,' 'Antiqui- ties of Great Britain,'and 'Cathedral Antiquities'—Britton's 'Autobiography'™ Pugin and Willson—Their 'Specimens of Gothic Architecture'—The Age of Plagiarism ....... pages 72-90 CHAPTER VI.
A Retrospect—James Essex—Wyatt's Professional Practice—His ' Improvements' and Re-
storations-—Old and Modern Sculpture—Restoration of Henry VII.'s Chapel— Public Confidence in Wyatt—New College Chapel, Oxford—John Carter—His Antiquarian Tastes—His Letters in the ' Gentleman's Magazine '—Effect of Carter's Remonstrance—William Atkinson—Cottingham's Works-—J. C. Buckler—His Addi- tions to Costessy Hall—His Description of Magdalen College . . 91-111 CHAPTER VII.
Sir Walter Scott—The Waverley Novels—Their Effect on the Revival—Progress of
Mediaeval Sentiment—Domestic Architecture—The Church of ' the Period '—Dr. Milner—The 'Antiquities of Winchester'—Milner's Literary Works—His Attack on Wyatt—Thomas Rickman—St. George's Church, Birmingham—Rickman's Literary Works—John Shaw—Christ's Hospital—A. Poynter—St. Katherine's Hospital— Salvin's Works—Scotney Castle—Dr. Whewell—Foreign Gothic . 112-131 CHAPTER VIII.
The Pointed Arch Question—Theories as to the Origin of Gothic—Modern Gothic
Sculpture—Classification of Styles—Ecclesiological Studies—Proprieties of Design— Edward Blore—His Early Life and Studies—His ' Monumental Remains'—His Pro- fessional Works—James Savage—St. Luke's Church, Chelsea—Characteristics of the Building ........ 132-144 CHAPTER IX.
A. N. Welby Pugin—His early Life—His Theatrical Tastes—St. Marie's Grange—Scaris-
brick Hall—Pugin's Literary Works—His Tour in Italy—Character of Pugin's Designs —His Facility of Invention—St. Giles's Church, Cheadle—St. George's Cathedra], Westminster—St. Chad's Church, Birmingham—Stained Glass in St. Chad's— Character of Ancient Glass—Church of St. Wilfrid, Manchester—St. Marie's Church, Liverpool—Pugin's House at Ramsgate—St. Augustine's Church . 145-165 |
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Contents. xi
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CHAPTER X.
Sir Charles Barry—His Early Works—His Views on Church Architecture—The Houses
of Parliament Competition—Barry's Design selected—The unsuccessful Designs— St. Stephen's Chapel—Westminster Hall—Ingenuity of Barry's Plan—Opposition to Barry's Scheme—Mr. Hamilton's Protest and Arguments—Anti-Mediasval Prejudices —Pseudo-moral Objections—Colonel Jackson's Reply—Commencement of the Work —Character of Barry's Design—Its Effects on the Revival, and Influence on Art- Manufacture ....... pages 166-186 |
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CHAPTER XI.
Revival of Ecclesiastical Architecture—The 'Incorporated Society for Promoting the
Building of Churches'—* Commissioners' Churches'—Evangelical Scruples—Utili- tarian Objections—Ecclesiastical Economy—Secular Apathy—Condition of Church Service—The Cambridge Camden Society—Publication of the * Ecclesiologist'__
Neale's ' Hints to Churchwardens'—Opposition to the Cambridge Camden Society—
Its Change of Name—Restoration of the Temple Church—Dr. Chandler—The Oxford Society—Their Effect on the Revival—Mr. Beresford-Hope—Kilndown Church . . , . . , . , 187-208 |
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CHAPTER XII.
a.d. 1840-1850—Architects of the Revival—Lincoln's Inn Hall—Character ©f the Design
—Mr. Drake's Lectures—Bartholomew's Essay on the Decline of Excellence in the Structure of English Buildings—Exhibition of Medieval Art—Wilton Church and Cheltenham College—Publication of 'The Builder'—The Works of Scott and Ferrey—Church of St. Giles's, Camberwell—R. C. Carpenter—His Churches at Birmingham and elsewhere—Mr. Butter field—St. Augustine's College, Canter- buiT........209-228 |
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CHAPTER XIII.
The Rev. J. L. Petit—Mr. E. A. Freeman—Ecclesiological Symbolism—Translation of
Durandus published—Nomenclature of Styles—Mr. E. Sharpe—His 'Architectural Parallels'—His Professional Works—Paley's 'Gothic Mouldings'—Bowman and Crowther-Nash's 'Mansions of England'—Mr. R. W. Billings-His 'Baronial Antiquities of Scotland'—Brandon's 'Analysis of Gothic Architecture'—Messrs. Hadfield andWeightman—Their Works at Manchester, Sheffield, &c—Mr. J.J.Scoles —Church of St. Francis Xavier at Liverpool—A new Reformation . 229-245 |
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xi i Contents.
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CHAPTER XIV.
New Churches in London—St. Andrew's, Wells Street—St. Stephen's, Westminster—St.
Barnabas', Pimlico—St. Mary Magdalene, Munster Square—Proposed Erection of a Model Church—All Saints' Church, Margaret Street-—Its Internal Decoration—Criti- cism of the work—Yealmpton Church—Abbey Mere, Plymouth—St. Alban's Church, Holborn—Description of its Details—Decorative Sculpture and Painting— Chapel of Balliol College, Oxford—Keble College—Characteristics of Mr. Butter- field's Work ...... . PAGES 246-263 CHAPTER XV.
' Ruskinism '—Condition of Modern Architecture—* The Seven Lamps '—Claims of
Italian Gothic—Mr. Ruskin as an Art Reformer—Use of Iron in visible Construction —Development of Window Tracery—'The Lamp of Beauty'—Mr. Ruskin's Critics—The Morality of Art—-Proposed Limits of National Style—Character of Mr. Ruskin's Views—* The Stones of Venice'—Divisions and Subdivisions—Mr. Ruskin as a Critic—Early Converts to Ruskinism—Introduction of Venetian Gothic 264-280 CHAPTER XVI.
The Great Exhibition of 1851—Its Effect on the Revival—Messrs. Deane and Woodward
—The Oxford Museum—Decorative Treatment of the Building—Christ Church and Merton Colleges—Domestic and Ecclesiastical Gothic—Church Architects a.d. 1850-60—St. Peter's Church, Bournemouth—All Saints' Church, Notting Hill— Character of Mr. White's Designs—Lyndhurst Church, Hampshire—Exeter College Chapel and Library—Progress of the Revival—The Battle of the Styles . 281-297 CHAPTER XVII.
Deficiency of Public Interest—The Architectural Exhibition—The Architectural Museum
—Mr. F. Wyatt's Works—Orchardleigh Park and Capel Manor—Mr. J. L. Pearson's Works—Treberfydd House and Quar Wood—Mr. J. Prichard—Eatington Park—- Adaptability of Italian Gothic—New Houses at Westminster—Mr. Scott on the Revival—The New Foreign Office Competition—Lord Palmerston's Dislike to Gothic —The Manchester Assize Courts Competition—Mr. Waterhouse's Design—The Building as executed—Ancient Art and Modern Requirements . . 298-315 CHAPTER XVIII.
Influence of Individual Taste—The Study of French Gothic—The Lille Cathedral Com-
petition:—M. Viollet-le-Duc—The 'Dictionnairede 1'Architecture Franchise'—Sketches published by Shaw and Nesfield—Church of St. Francis of Assisi, Notting Hill— Church of St. James the Less, Westminster—Character of Mr. Street's designs— |
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xiii
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Contents.
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Church of SS. Philip and James, Oxford—St. Peter's Church, Vauxhall—Internal
Decoration of St. Peter's—Mr. H. Woodyer—St. Raphael's College, Bristol—Church of the Holy Innocents at Highnam—St. Paul's Church, Wokingham—Surrey County Schools—Eastbourne Convalescent Hospital—The House of Mercy at Bovey Tracey ....... pages 316-332 CHAPTER XIX.
A Truce to the Battle of the Styles —The Medievalists divided—The Eclectic and the
Parish Schools—Mr. T. Hudson Turner—Parker's ' Domestic Architecture of the Middle Ages'—Unpopularity of Early Art—A Reaction in favour of Late Pointed Work—Mr. R. Norman Shaw—Leyes Wood and Glen Andred—Mr.W. E. Nesfield —Cloverley Hall—House at Farnham Royal—The Church of Rome and the Revival—Obstacles to Roman Catholic Encouragement of Gothic—Mr. G. Goldie—> Abbey of St. Scholastica, Teignmouth—Roman Catholic Church of St. Mary, Kensington — Mr. Hadfield's Works — The Revival independent of Religious Creed . . ... . . . . 333"35! CHAPTER XX.
a.d. i 860-1870—The Works of Mr. W. Burges—Cathedral Church of St. Finbar, Cork
—New Tower at Cardiff Castle—' Knightshayes,' Devon—The Dangers of Liberty in Design—Mr. E. W. Godwin's Works—Town Halls at Northampton and Congleton —Three Schools of Modern Gothic—The University College of Wales—Balliol College, Oxford—* Humewood,' Wicklow—Mr. James Brooks—St. Chad's Church, Haggerston—St. Columba, Kingsland Road—Church of the Annunciation, Christ- church—French and English types—St. Stephen's Church, Hampstead—Mr. G. F. Bodley—Church of St. John the Baptist, Liverpool—Its Internal Decoration— Future Prospects of the Revival—Conclusion .... 352-372 |
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Errata.
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Page 102, line 22, for mezzo-relievo read mezzo-rilievo.
,, 191, „ 26, for had read had been.
„ 243, „ 4, for latter read former.
„ 270, „ 7, for has read have.
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ILLUSTRATIONS.
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PAGE
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The Annunciation : part of a mural painting in the chancel of All Saints'
Church, Notting Hill. . . . Church of St. Andrew, Plaistow, Essex ....
Old House on Pride Hill, Shrewsbury
The Torn Tower, Christ Church, Oxford
Eaton Hall, Cheshire. The seat of the Marquis of Westminster
Scotney Castle, Sussex. The residence of Edward Hussey, Esq.
Church of St. Augustine, Ramsgate ....
Church of S. Mary, Chetwynde, Shropshire .
College at Lancing, Sussex .....
St. John's (R. C.) Cathedral, Salford, Manchester
Church of S. Stephen, Westminster ....
Belfry of S. Alban's Church, London
Balliol College Chapel, Oxford
The University Museum, Oxford ....
Lyndhurst Parish Church . , . .
South Porch of Exeter College Chapel, Oxford
Qrcbardleigh Park, Somersetshire. The seat of W. Duckworth, Esq.
Quar Wood, Gloucestershire. The residence of the Rev. R. W. Hippisley
Eatington Park, Warwickshire. The seat of E. P. Shirley, Esq.
Entrance to the Assize Courts, Manchester .
Entrance to the Digby Mortuary Chapel, Sherborne .
Baptistery of St. Francis' Church, Notting Hill
Church of S. Philip and S. James, Oxford
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frontispiece
to face i |
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xvi Illustrations.
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Portion of Nave Arcade, All Saints' Church
Capital of Nave Pier, St. Alban's Church
Ironwork of Chancel Railing, St. Alban's Church
Spandrils and Arch-mouldings of Windows, Oxford Museum
Ironwork Capital, Oxford Museum ....
Carved Capital, Oxford Museum ....
Decorative Sculpture of Reredos, St. Peter's Church, Bournemouth
Carved Capitals, Lyndhurst Church ....
Corbel, Exeter College Chapel, Oxford ....
Dormer Window, Eatington Park, Warwickshire
Chimneys, Eatington Park .....
Fireplace in House at Farnham Royal, Windsor
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258
259 284 285 286 290 294 295 305 306 |
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HISTORY ',
".'■■•:■'■■' • ■'.-....':.: '. ■;" ■ ■'■■. '-■■ ' '"'■• '*■* ■'■-'
OF
...... S ■■"- ■ V - ■■*-.■■ ■■ t""* ■
THE GOTHIC REVIVAL.
...... • zt -
CHAPTER L ' ; : '!
HE RENEWAL, in this country, of a taste for. Mediaeval
architecture, and the reapplication of those principles which regulate its design, represent one of the most interesting and remarkable phases in the history of art. Unlike the Italian Renaissance, which was intimately associated with, and in a great measure dependent on, the study of ancient literature, our modern English Revival fails to exhibit, even in its earliest development, many of those external causes to which we are accustomed to attribute a revolution in public taste. To the various influences which raised this school of art from the
crumbling ruins of the Roman empire to its glory in Western Europe, and then permitted it to lapse into degradation in the sixteenth century, history points with an unerring hand. But for the stranger influence which slowly though surely has rescued it from that degradation, which has enlisted such universal sympathy in its behalf, and which bids fair, m spite of ignorant and idle prejudice, to adapt it, after two hundred years of neglect and contumely, to the requirements of a mercantile people and a practical age—for this influence, indeed, if we search at all, we must search in more than one direction. |
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Church of St. Andrezv, Plaistotv, Essex,
yawes Brooks, Architect, 1867,
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Ancient and Modern Art.
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2
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At first it may seem strange that a style of design which is intimately
associated with the romance of the world's history should now-a-days find favour in a country distinguished above all others for the plain business-like tenour of its daily life. But this presents a paradox more obvious in a moral than in an historical sense.
i
It is not because England has been stigmatised as a nation of shop-
keepers that she is necessarily indifferent to the progress of architecture. The fairest palaces of Venice were raised at a time when her commercial prosperity stood at its zenith, but her art and her commerce had grown up together, and if the latter was genuine and healthy, the former was unsophisticated and pure. They had had a common origin in the welfare of the State. With the decay of the State they declined. Art in the thirteenth century was no mere hobby of the educated, nor a taste which depended on antiquarian research for its perfection. It belonged to the habits, to the necessities, one might almost say to the instincts, of civilised life. Men did not then theorise on the fitness of style, or the propriety of this or that mode of decoration. There was but one style at one time — adopted, no doubt, with more or less success, according to the ability of the designer, but adopted with perfect con- fidence and uniformity of purpose—untrammelled by the consideration of dates or mouldings, or any of the fussiness of archaeology, and maintaining its integrity, not by the authority of private judgment, but by the free will and common acceptation of a people. The difference of condition between ancient and modern art has a
direct analogy with that which exists between ancient and modern poetry, and which has been ably illustrated by one of the greatest of our modern writers. cIn a rude state of society,' says Macaulay,f men are children with a greater variety of ideas. It is, therefore, in such a state of society that we may expect to find the poetical temperament in its highest perfection. In an enlightened age there will be much intelligence, much science, much philosophy, abundance of just classification and subtle analysis, abundance of wit and eloquence, abundance of verses, |
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Effect of Civilisation. . 3
and even of good ones ; but little poetry. Men will judge and com-
pare ; but they will not create.' If this reasoning be just in regard to the poetry of language, it is
equally so with respect to the poetry of art. As a nation, we have grown too sophisticated to enjoy either intuitively. But there is another kind of admiration which we, in common with all modern Europe, may hope to feel for both, and which is derived from and dependent on the cultivation of the human intellect. The graceful action of a child at play is mainly due to its utter artlessness. It may skip and jump and roll upon the greensward in a manner which defies our artificial sense of decorum. Yet every movement associated with that age of innocence has a charm for us. It may be free and uncon- ventional, but never clumsy. It may be quaint or even boisterous, but never vulgar. Such is the comeliness of. nature, which by-and-by is. handed over to the mercies of the dancing-master, who, with fiddle in hand and toes turned outwards, proceeds to teach our little ones deport- ment. From that moment ensues a dreary interval of primness and awkwardness. Who has not noticed the semi-prudish gaucherie of little ladies from the age of (say) twelve to sixteen ? As a rule they stand, sit, walk, and converse with a painful air of restraint, in which all natural grace is lost in an overwhelming sense of propriety, nor is it until they ripen into womanhood that they acquire that easy confidence of manner which is at once characteristic of the most perfect breeding and the purest heart. It is precisely such an interval as this—an interval between youthful
grace and mature beauty—which must fall to the fate of every art during the progress of civilisation. But, instead of years, we need centuries of teaching to re-establish principles which were once inde- pendent of education, but which have lapsed away before the sophistry of theoretic science, or have been obliterated by the influence of a false economy. It has now come to be an universally accepted fact that the arts of design attain their greatest perfection under two conditions. We B 2
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4 Decline of Mediceval Art.
must either have theories of the most refined and cultivated order, or
we must have no theories at all. In the present age, when theory is everything—when volume after volume issues from the press replete with the most subtle analysis of principles which are to guide us in our estimate of the beautiful, it is hopeless to expect that men will work by the light of nature alone, and forego the influence of precedent. If the c Dark Ages' had continued dark in the ordinary sense of the epithet, what might we not have expected from the beauties of the Pointed style ? Even if literature had kept pace with art, they might have gradually emerged together with the dawn of Western civilisation. But the change, though gradual, was too thorough for such a result, and when at length the dazzling light of the Renaissance burst in upon our monasteries and cathedrals, the spirit of their magnificence faded away before the unexpected meteor. The tree of knowledge had been tasted, and it was vain to expect sustenance from the tree of life. Thence- forth, the art whose seed had been sown in the earliest period of European history—which had developed with the prosperity of nations, and borne good fruit in abundance after its kind—was doomed to wither away, neglected, into a sapless trunk—to be hedged round, indeed, by careful antiquaries, and pointed at as a curiosity, but never, as it once seemed, likely to flourish again on English soil. And here, if it were not time to drop the metaphor, one might
extend its significance yet further. For there are two theories respect- ing the revival of Gothic architecture in this country. One is, that it appears among us as a new exotic plant, requiring different culture from its ancient prototype, which is supposed to have become utterly extinct. But there are those who love to think that the old parent stem never altogether lost its vitality, and that the Mediaeval tendencies which crop up among us now in this latter half of the nineteenth century may be compared to the fresh green sprouts which owe their existence to the life still lingering in some venerable forest oak. The supporters of this latter theory have a great deal to urge on
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Elizabethan A rchitecture.
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5
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their side of the question. In the first place the Renaissance school,
from which we are accustomed to date the extinction of Gothic art, although it appeared in Italy with Brunelleschi at its head during the early part of the fifteenth century, was scarcely recognised in England until a hundred years later, and long after that period, even when the works of Lomazzo and Philibert de l'Orme had been translated into English, and John Shute, an architect of Queen Elizabeth's time, had returned from Italy (whither he had been sent by his patron Dudley, Duke of Northumberland), no doubt full of conceits for, and admira- tion of, the new style, there was little to be seen of that style, save the incongruous details with which it became the fashion to decorate the palatial houses of the aristocracy. But though Italian stringcourses and keystones, quoins, and cornices, were introduced abundantly in the bay- windows and porticoes of the day, the main outline of the buildings to which those features belonged remained in accordance with the ancient type. This was especially the case in rural districts. The counties of Shropshire, Chester, and Stafford, bear evidence to this day, in many an old timber house which dates from the Elizabethan period, of the tenacity with which the old style held its own in regard to general arrangement, long after it had been grafted with the details of a foreign school. Even down to the reign of James I., the domestic architecture of England, as exemplified in the country houses of the nobility, was Gothic in spirit, and frequently contained more real elements of a Mediaeval character than many which have been built in modern times by the light of archaeological orthodoxy, Inigo Jones himself required a second visit to Italy before he could thoroughly abandon the use of the Pointed arch. But its days were now numbered, and when in 1633 the first stone was laid for a Roman portico to one of the finest cathedrals of the Middle Ages, the tide of national taste may be said to have completely turned, and Gothic architecture, as a practicable art, received what was then no doubt supposed to be its death-blow. |
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£?/</ House on Pride Hill, Shrewsbury.
From a Sketch by C. L. East lake.
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6 Dodsworth and Dugdale.
By a strange and fortunate coincidence of events, however, it
happened that at this very time, when architects of the period had learned to despise the buildings of their ancestors, a spirit of veneration for the past was springing up among a class of men who may be said to have founded our modern school of antiquaries. Sometimes, indeed, their researches were not those of a character from which much advantage was to be expected. James I. spent a great deal of his own and his architect's time in speculating on the origin of Stonehenge, and no doubt many ingenious theorists were content to follow the royal example. But luckily for posterity, the attention of others was drawn in a more serviceable direction. Up to this time no work of any import- ance had been published on the Architectural Antiquities of England. A period had arrived when it was thought necessary, if only on historical grounds, that some record of ecclesiastical establishments should be compiled. The promoters of the scheme were probably little influenced by the love of Gothic as a style. But an old building was necessarily a Gothic building, and thus it happened that, in spite of the prejudices of the age, and probably their own aesthetic predilections, the anti- quarians of the day became the means of keeping alive some interest in a school of architecture which had ceased to be practically employed. Early in the reign of Charles I., Mr. Roger Dodsworth, who appears
to have belonged to a good family in Yorkshire, inspired by that love of archaeology which distinguished many gentlemen of the time, began to collect materials for a history of his native county. In the course of his research, he necessarily acquired much interesting information concerning the origin and endowments of those religious houses of the North which had been established previous to the Reformation, While Dodsworth—a man somewhat advanced in years—was engaged in this pursuit, a younger antiquarian than himself, Mr. William Dugdale, of Blythe, was similarly occupied in compiling a history of Warwickshire. •Sir Henry Spelman, who knew both, and appreciated the value of their labours, perceived that, by uniting the labours of these gentlemen, a |
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The ' Monasticon Anglicamim? 7
valuable result might be obtained. He therefore did his best to bring
them together, and we have reason to be thankful that he succeeded in doing so, for a literary partnership ensued, and the produce of their joint authorship was the c Monasticon Anglicanum.' Opinions are much divided concerning Dugdale's share in the earlier
portions of this work. Mr. Gough, in his c British Topography,' contends that the two first volumes were compiled entirely by Dods- worth. This opinion has since been refuted, with what success need not here be discussed. It suffices to state that Dodsworth, who was indubitably the original projector of the undertaking, died a year before the publication of the first volume, which occurred in 1655. This volume appeared without dedication, and, indeed, it would have been difficult to find, in those stormy times, and among the Puritan leaders of the Commonwealth, a patron who was sufficiently interested in the object of the work to lend his name to the title-page. Nor were the interests of literature likely to be better supported by the Royalists themselves, who had just been iniquitously deprived of one-tenth of their estates under the military despotism which then obtained in England. The book, in short, met with a miserable sale, so much so that it was not until seven years later, after the Restoration, that the second volume appeared—this time accompanied by a dedication to his gracious Majesty King Charles II., who no doubt was much edified by its perusal. The third volume came out in 1673—the memorable year of the Test Act—and, by an entry in Dugdale's diary, it seems that he received fifty pounds for it. In this concluding portion of his labour he had been assisted by Sir Thomas Herbert and Mr. Anthony a Wood. In 1682 a new and improved edition of the first volume was published
(Editio secunda auctior et emendatior; cum altera ac elucidiori indice), and of this edition many copies exist. It has a double title-page, the first containing a sort of genealogical tree, on the branches of which ate represented, in a kneeling attitude, little groups of figures emblematical |
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8 Hollar and King.
of various religious and monastic orders. At the foot of the tree stand
St. Benedict, St. Dunstan, St. Gregory, St. Augustine, and St. Cuth- bert. The engraving opposite this is remarkable for two facts connected with it. Although the work to which it Introduces the reader treats of none but Mediaeval buildings, the design of this page is essentially Italian in character, and In fact represents a kind of Roman triumphal arch, so indifferent were its authors to the interests of Gothic art. But their sympathy with the fate of many an ecclesiastical institution which. had perished under the rule of Henry VIII. is indicated by two vignettes which appear at the bottom of the plate. In one of these a king is seen kneeling before an altar and dedicating some grant f Deo et ecclesia ' m behalf of an abbey which appears delineated in the distance. In the second compartment the abbey is in ruins, and £ bluff King Hal,' straddling in the foreground, and apart from his Royal predecessors, points with his stick to the dismantled walls, exclaiming, c Sic volo.' It is impossible to mistake the spirit which found vent in these
symbols. The engravings which were published with the original editions of the c Monasticon' were executed by Hollar and King, two artists, of whose names one would certainly not otherwise have reached posterity. Those by Hollar are the best, and are chiefly illustrative of the various costumes worn by ancient religious orders in England. King undertook the architectural views, which are for the most part of a rude and unsatisfactory description. They are frequently out of perspective, and are neither faithful in matters of detail nor drawn with any artistic spirit. They are, however, not uninteresting to the modern student, as they include many records of buildings, or portions of buildings, which have long since perished under the hand of time. Among Hollar's may be mentioned a view of Lincoln Cathedral, show- ing the spire previous to its destruction in 1547, and the views of Salisbury with its detached belfry (on the north side), since removed. The descriptive text is written in Latin, after a fashion common with
such works of that date. From an allusion in his -diary in 1658, |
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Illustrations of the lMonasticon? 9
Dugdale seems to have feared that ' Mr. King' (probably a clerk in
his employ) was about to publish a translation of the ' Monasticon.' That such a work was prepared to the extent of the first volume is evident from the fact that Dugdale himself alludes to its being { erroneously Englished' in many places. The abridged translation, however, which was subsequently published, did not appear until 1692, six years after Sir William Dugdale's death, and being signed c J. W.' was ascribed to Mr. James Wright, a barrister of the Middle Temple, who, in 1684, published the f History and Antiquities of the County of Rutland.' Other abridgments and extracts from the original work fol- lowed, many of which were inaccurate. The modern edition is well known. It was the result of the joint
labours of three gentlemen eminently qualified for the task which they undertook:—The Rev. Bulkeley Bandinell, D.D., keeper of the Bodleian Library ; Mr. John Caley, keeper of the Records of the Augmentation Office (who, at a later period, held a similar post at Westminster) ; and Mr. (afterwards Sir Henry) Ellis, keeper of the MSS. in the British Museum. It is needless to say that the amount of erudition thus brought to bear upon the subject materially increased the historical value of the work. Hundreds of Religious Houses of which Dugdale knew little or nothing were added to the list. Most of Hollar's prints were re-engraved. Those by King were rejected as worthless. But, in order to supply their place, the authors availed themselves of an artist's assistance, whose work, though it may appear indifferent when judged by a more recent standard of merit, is by. no means deficient in artistic quality, and was no doubt among the best of his time. The engravings from Mr. John Coney's drawings will scarcely satisfy those who look for minute attention to the detail of Gothic ornament. But in breadth of effect, and in treatment of chiaroscuro, they will bear comparison with Piranesi. It is to be regretted that the initial letters and a few other characteristics of the early text were not reproduced. But taken as a whole., and considering |
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io Inigo yones.
the period at which it was brought out, the modern edition of the
f Monasticon' is a work which does credit to its authors and the spirit which induced its publication. In examining the condition of what is commonly known as Pointed
architecture during the seventeenth century, the student will be not a little puzzled who attempts to ascribe, with anything like chronological accuracy, its various characteristics to such a sequence of events as influenced it before, or have prevailed upon it since, that period. In the present day, when a few hours' journey enables us to pass from one end of England to another, and even into the heart of the Continent— when the increased facilities and cheapness of publication have rendered the public familiar with all sorts and conditions of ancient and modern art, it is difficult to estimate the importance which once attached to the merit and capabilities of individual example. Every builder's clerk who can now get away for a month's holiday may spend his time profitably among the churches of Normandy, or fill his portfolio with sketches in Rhineland. But, two hundred years ago a travelled archi- tect was a great man, entitled to an amount of respect which quickly secured for him the highest patronage, and enabled him to form a school of which he became the acknowledged leader. The development of such a school, however, was often necessarily limited to that portion of the country where he found a field for the display of his talents. Meantime, many a rural practitioner was content to imitate the work of his forefathers; and thus, while the influence of the new Italian school was brought to bear upon public and important works, a large propor- tion of minor and domestic buildings still continued to be designed in that style which, though debased in character, may be fairly described as Mediaeval. It is well known that the earliest works of Inigo Jones himself were
Gothic; and even after his return from Italy, where he had studied the works of Palladio, he could not entirely forsake the groove in which his youthful efforts had been exercised. The north and south sides of |
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"Archbishop Land. n
the quadrangle at St, John's College, Oxford, still bear witness of his
genius in a design which, though it has with justice been described as bastard in its details, is nevertheless an eminently picturesque com- position, and shows, moreover, how fondly the elder university still adhered to those ancient traditions of art which had shed a glory on her most venerable foundations. That work was undertaken at the cost of Archbishop Laud, whose tastes, so far as we can now infer, had but little in common with the then rising school of architecture. Indeed, it is not difficult to imagine that a prelate so zealous for the constitution and privileges of his order, so conservative in his notions of matters ecclesiastic, so attached to ceremonial and that form of worship which had most sympathy with Rome and least with Geneva, must have looked with some jealousy on a style of art which England owed to the Revival of Literature and to the Reformation. It is a remarkable fact that, during Laud's episcopate, and some
years after the new art-doctrines had been promulgated, more than one Gothic church was consecrated by him and probably reared at his expense. Among these may be mentioned St. Catharine Cree, in Leadenhall Street, and the parish church at Hammersmith, of which the first stone was laid in 16^9. Bishop Cosin, another patron and connoisseur of architecture, who was raised to the See of Durham in the reign of Charles I., unbeneficed during the Commonwealth, and who returned to his diocese after the Restoration, also sustained by his aid the now waning influence of Mediaeval design. He partly rebuilt the palace and chapel of Bishop's Auckland, with far more reverence for ancient precedent than could be found in many a work of his contemporaries. The windows of the chapel are (at least in general conception) by no means bad imitations of geometrical tracery. The stalls, the pulpit and reading-desk, the reredos and roofs, though belonging to a class of art which we should not like to see reproduced in our own day, have nevertheless a certain dignity about their form which is worthy of a better age. |
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12 The Durham Churches.
The design of the stalls and font-cover of Durham Cathedral may-
be referred to the same date, and probably to the same influence. The chancel of Brancepeth Church, near Durham, is supposed to have been fitted up after the Reformation, and is on that account remarkable for its chancel-screen. There is another of similar design at Ledgefield, and indeed the retention of this feature, until a late period, in the parish churches of Durham is a peculiar characteristic of that county. The general proportions of the Brancepeth screen are excellent: the stalls are evidently copied from earlier work, and the whole of the woodwork, though naturally deficient in purity of detail, is thoroughly Gothic in motive. Such examples become the more interesting when we remember that
they were probably executed long after the dilettanti of the day had been imbued with a taste for Italian art. So early as 1624, Sir Henry Wotton, one of the most accomplished authorities of the day, had published his c Elements of Architecture,' a lengthy essay, which if we except the work of John Shute,* is perhaps the most important that had then appeared on the subject. In the introduction he says, {I shall not neede (like the most part of Writers) to celebrate the subject which I deliver. In that point I am at ease. For Architecture can want no commendation where there are Noble Men or Noble Mindes; I will therefore spend this Preface rather about those from whom I have gathered my knowledge ; For I am but a gatherer and disposer of other men's StufFe at my best value.' He then goes on to describe Vitruvius as * our principall Master,' and alludes to the works of Leon-Battista Alberti, whom he reputes c the first learned architect beyond the Alpes.' The metaphysical character of his theories, as well as the analogies * The title of Shute's book (probably the earliest work of the kind published in
England) was, 'The first and chiefe Grounds of Architecture used in all the ancient and famous Monyments, with a farther and more ample Discourse uppon the same than has hitherto been set forthe by any other.' By John Shute, paynter and architecte. Printed by John Marshc, fob, 1563. There is no copy of it cither in the British Museum or in Sir John Soane's Library. |
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Sir Henry Wot ton. 13
which he draws between Nature and Art, remind us of modern writers,
and especially of one who has so ably espoused a very different cause- Mr. Ruskin. "Wotton begins his dissertation by stating thatc building hath three
conditions; Commoditie, Firmenes, and Delight.' It is curious to compare this division of qualities with the f Seven Lamps of Architec- ture,' by which the present generation has been illumined, and to note how the old author puts in a plea for circular plans on the ground that * birds doe build their nests spherically.' This is precisely the sort of argument which Mr. Ruskin uses when he recommends the pointed arch because it is the shape of leaves which are shaken in the summer breeze. The admirer of Mediseval art will probably consider that in the main object of their teaching, Mr. Ruskin is perfectly right, and Sir Henry Wotton was perfectly wrong, but when they base their opinions on such facts as these, they might change places without much damage to either cause. Sir Henry quotes largely from Vitruvius, and enters upon those
wonderful comparisons between the Orders and the human race which have been so often reproduced in Handbooks of Architecture, and have been the delight of Pecksniffs from time immemorial. But what after all is the real value of such fanciful derivations of
style ? What artistic principle do they illustrate ? What information do they convey ? Is there any rational critic who actually believes that he can detect the slightest resemblance between the Tuscan pillar and a < sturdy well-limbed labourer,' between the fluting of an Ionic column and the folds of a woman's dress, or discover in a capital of acanthus leaves any of that meretricious abandon which is supposed to have characterised the ladies of Corinth ? These are fables which may have pleased the pedants of King James's day, but it is time to forget them now. The subject of Gothic architecture Wotton passes over in this essay
with silence, and it is only in discussing the shape of arches that |
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14 Antiquaries of the Seventeenth Century.
he is betrayed into expressing his contempt for what we now call the
c Tudor style.' As semicircular arches (says he) or Hemisphericall vaults being raised upon the
totall diameter, bee of all other the roundest and consequently the securest so those are the gracefullest which, keeping precisely the same height, shall yet bee distended one fourteenth part longer than the sayd entire diameter, which addition of distent will conferre much to their Beauty, and detract but little from their Strength . . . . As for those arches which our artizans call of the third and fourth point; and the Tuscan writers di terzo and di quarto acuta, because they alwayes concurre in an acute Angle and doe springe from division of the Diameter into three, foure, or more parts at pleasure ; I say such as these, both for the natural imbecility of the sharpe angle it selfe, and likewise for their very Vncomelinesse, ought to bee exiled from judicious eyes, and left to their first inventors, the Gothes or Lumbards, amongst other Reliques of that barbarous Age, In spite of the contumely thus heaped upon Gothic, and the neglect
with which it was treated by the followers of Palladio, it met with respect in some quarters and especially among the antiquaries. We have already seen that an interval of seven years elapsed between the publication of the first and second volumes of the £ Monasticon.' But in that interval a work was produced by the same author which could not fail to draw attention to the beauties of what was once one of the finest cathedrals in the world, and the memory of which has been thus happily transmitted to our own time in the form of a well written and well illustrated record. Dugdale's f History of St. Paul's Cathedral ' has passed through several editions. It has been enlarged by Maynard, continued and further amplified by Sir Henry Ellis, and decorated with new engravings by Finden and Heath. But to the antiquary no copy of it possesses half the interest of that dear old time-stained volume, 5 printed,' as the title-page sets forth in red and black type, in London cby Tho. Warren in the year of our Lord God MDCLVIII.' It was a memorable epoch in the annals of English history. The
man who had sacrificed his king to the interests of his country, who |
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Dugdale's 'History of St. Paul's.' 15
had redeemed the honour of the British flag where it had long been
insulted, who had begun life as an earnest enthusiast for civil and religious liberty, and ended it as a tyrant—Cromwell, the greatest prince of his age and the most miserable regicide, covered with military glory only to be filled by-and-by with abject remorse, the hero of Marston Moor and Naseby, who could not sleep for fear of assassination, died of fever on September 3, in the same year which saw the publica- tion of Dugdale's book. Discontent had long been gathering in the country, and a time had now arrived when the rising influence of the Royalist party no doubt encouraged the efforts of many a man who, like Dugdale, was a staunch supporter of the Church. It may be doubted whether the volume appeared before or after Cromwell's death, but it is certain that it must have been published within a few months of that event, and therefore to this original edition, printed as it was before the plague and fire of London, and perhaps conned over in turn by Roundhead and Cavalier, something more than ordinary interest is attached. The etchings which accompany this valuable work are by Hollar, and
in many respects superior to those which appear with the c Monasticon.' Facing the title-page there is a portrait of Dugdale himself at the age of fifty, wearing the broad-brimmed hat, buttoned coat, and Geneva bands with which we are accustomed to associate Master Izaak Walton and many other worthies of his time. The dedicatory epistle is to the Right Honourable Christopher Lord Hatton, Comptroller of the Household to the late King Charles, and one of his Majesty's most Honourable Privy Council. In it the writer cautiously but plainly deplores the late aspect of affairs, and quotes the almost prophetic words of Sir Walter Raleigh, who forty years before, f discerning even then the increase and growth of sectaries in the realm,' observed, 1 that all cost and care bestowed and had of the Church-wherein God is to be served and worshipped was accounted by those people a kinde of Popery ; so that time would soon bring it to passe, if it were not |
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16 Dvigdales 'History of St. Paul's?
resisted, that God would be turned out of Churches into Barnes, and
from thence again into the Feilds and Mountains and under Hedges ; and the office of the Ministry (robbed of all dignity and respect) be as contemptible as those places ; all order, discipline, and Church-govern- ment left to newness of opinion and men's fancies; yea, and soone after, as many kindes of religion spring up as there are parish churches within England; every contentious and ignorant person cloathing his fancie with the Spirit of God and his imagination with the gift of Revelation,' &c. This letter is dated from the author's residence in Blythe Hall,
Warwickshire, July 7, 1657, from which we may, perhaps, infer that the volume issued from the press early in the following year, and before that event occurred which brought about a very different state of things. An interesting account of the foundation and various endowments
of the old cathedral then follows, assigning dates to the completion of different portions of the structure. After this is a description of the monumental epitaphs accompanied by illustrations (many of which are executed with great care) of the tombs and brasses, &c. Most of them are Italian, and though of a most objectionable design, are interesting in the evidence which they afford of early Renaissance conceits. A series of general views is then added. A perspective of the
cloisters from the south shows the chapter-house then standing in the quadrangle which they enclosed. Another perspective of the south front of the cathedral includes a view of the spire after its ' restoration' in 1553, and previous to its final destruction by lightning in 1561. On this last occasion the fire spread over the roof of the nave and aisles, burning the rafters and all that was combustible within the space of four hours; c Whereupon the Queen (Elizabeth) out of a deep appre- hension of this lamentable accident, forthwith directed her Letters to the Lord Mayor of London, requiring him to take some speedy order for its repair; and, to further the work, gave out of her own purse a |
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Old St. Paul's Italianised. 17
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thousand marks in gold, as also warrant for a thousand loads of timber,
to be taken in her woods or elsewhere.' The work of repair was prosecuted (with such dilligence' (!) that
before April, 1566, all the roofs were finished and covered with lead. The larger trusses had been framed in Yorkshire, and brought to town by sea. Various models were made for restoring the steeple, but neither in Queen Elizabeth's reign, nor subsequently, were any of these plans carried out. In the eighteenth year of the reign of King James L, that monarch
having been repeatedly solicited by one Master Henry Farley, a gentle- man who appears to have taken great interest in the cathedral, at length turned his attention to its dilapidated condition, and Dugdale records that c his princely heart was moved with Such Compassion to this decayed fabrick that, for prevention of its neer approaching ruine (by the corroding quality of the coale smoake, especially in moist weather, whereunto it had long been subject), considering with himself how vast the charge would be; as, also, that without very great and publick helps it could not be born ; to beget the more venerable regard towards so worthy an enterprize, and more effectually to put it forwards, he came in great state thither on Horseback upon Sunday, 26th of March 1620.' An appropriate sermon was preached on this occasion by the Bishop
of London (Dr. King), to whom his Majesty had himself supplied the text (Psalm 102, v. 13 and 14). After which the royal party adjourned to the bishop's palace, where, it appears, the hospitable prelate entertained them with f several 1 set Banquets.' The result of this visit became manifest in a Royal Commission, which
was appointed in November of the same year. It included many eminent noblemen and ecclesiastics, but of all the names on the list the one which bears most on our present subject is that of Inigo Jones, c Esquire,' then surveyor to his Majesty's works. The Commission |
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18 Royal Commissions on St. Paul's.
bore, in some respects, a resemblance to many such Commissions of our
own day. It wasted a great deal of time in talking. Months and years slipped away. The Bishop of London, who had subscribed liberally to the undertaking, died. His royal master did not long survive him. Still nothing important in the way of restoration had been begun. Meantime the taste for classic art was rapidly gaining ground. In the fourth year of King Charles's reign (1628) another Royal Commission was appointed, but it was not until 1633 that the first stone of the work was laid. Inigo Jones had been formally appointed to superintend it. The then Bishop of London was his old patron Laud, at whose cost the eastern wing of St. John's College, Oxford, had just been erected. In that instance some respect had been felt for the original style of the building, and the new wing was at least Gothic in its general outline. It would not have been surprising if similar deference had been
paid to the original design of so grand a specimen of Mediasval archi- tecture as old St. Paul's. It might have been hoped, too, that the bishop would have recommended an adherence to ancient precedent, if only on the score of congruity. But Jones had not travelled to Italy for nothing. Here was an opportunity of displaying his skill in a field which seemed not only magnificent in itself, but had all the addi- tional attraction of novelty. He went to work without the slightest scruple. The walls of the nave were remodelled. Round-headed lights, with cherubim for key-stones, supplanted the delicate tracery of the old windows. Buttresses were replaced by pilasters, and battle- ments by balustrading. The facades were scored all over with ugly lines of exhibited masonry, obelisks stood in the place of pinnacles, and heavy cornices were introduced where formerly a modest drip-stone or string-course had done good and all-sufficient service. Finally, at the west end was placed a Corinthian portico, which, however magni- ficent a feature in itself, must have been a hideous deformity where it |
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The Fire of London. 19
stood. It was not fated to stand there long. A quarter of a century-
had scarcely elapsed before the whole fabric was in ruins. It has been said that the present building—confessedly a noble work in its way— rose like a Phoenix from the ashes of the Great Fire. But, if we are to indulge at all in such a poetical conception, let us rather say that the good genius of old St. Paul's survived the catastrophe, in a less sub- stantial form, indeed, but invested with a more congenial spirit— that spirit which has induced us to reverence and imitate elsewhere, after centuries of time, the elements of design which constituted its ancient glory. |
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20 Anthony a Wood.
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CHAPTER II.
E have seen that a considerable interest in the ancient archi-
tecture of Britain was sustained during the seventeenth century by antiquarian research. Among men of the day to whom posterity is most deeply indebted for labours in that direction was one who has been already mentioned in connection with the third volume of the f Monasticon' (which he had assisted Dugdale to prepare), but whose name is better known as the sole author of an equally important work, the f Athense Oxonienses.' Anthony, son of Thomas Awood, or, as it is usually written, a
Wood', Bachelor of Arts and of Civil Law, was born in the year 1631, opposite Merton College, Oxford, where in due time he matriculated and took his M.A. degree. He appears to have been inclined from early youth to the study of English history and archaeological lore. Oxford was a field which naturally presented every attraction for the exercise of his tastes as an antiquarian. It was his native town. It was his place of education. It supplied him at once with a rich mine of historical interest, and with the means of working it. While he was still a young man he wrote a treatise on the antiquities of Oxford, which was esteemed so highly by the heads of the various colleges that they ordered a Latin translation of it, which appeared in 1674, under the title of c Historta et Antiquitates Universitatis Oxoniensis, duobus voll. comprehens^y fol. It was prepared with immense pains, and the author intended to have added to the English copy some account of the city as well as of the colleges. But he was hindered by his labours for another work, the famous c Athenae,' or c An exact History of all the |
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The k A thence Oxonienses! 21
Writers and Bishops who have had their education in the most ancient
and famous University of Oxford, from the .fifteenth year of King Henry VII. Dom. 1500, to the end of the year 1690. To which are added the Fasti, or Annals of the University for the same time.' On this book, as the dates in the title show, he was engaged during the greater part of his life, and it is impossible to overrate the extraordinary patience and research involved in its production. Public and private libraries were ransacked, wills at the Prerogative Office examined, church windows inspected, and parish registers consulted, to attain his object. It might with reason be supposed that such untiring industry, coupled with so excellent a result, would have gained him favour and credit at Oxford. But in those days a mere scholar had little to hope for in the way of patronage. Wood's manners were not of that polished kind which will always command a certain order of popularity. His habits were simple. He was careless in his dress. It was rumoured that he had joined the Romish faith. It is certain that he received more support from Roman Catholics than from members of the Established Church. Among all the Dons of the University it seems that Mr. Andrew Allam, Vice-Principal of St. Edmund's Hall, was the only one who aided his exertions. Unfortunately, in the f Athenae,' he had alluded to Lord Clarendon in somewhat uncom- plimentary terms. This was at the time sufficient to bring the work into ill-odour, and Wood had the mortification of finding it expelled from the University. He was now advanced in years, and his health succumbed to the trials which he had undergone. He died in his sixty-fifth year. In the east corner of the north side of St. John's Church, adjoining Merton College, is a small tablet to his memory :— H. S. E.
ANTONIUS WOOD: An TIQUARIUS.
Ob. 28 Nov. A°. 1695. Mr. 64. A century had nearly elapsed when John Gutch, chaplain of All Souls'
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22 Transition of Style.
and Corpus Christi Colleges, republished the c History and Antiquities
of Oxford,' in the popular edition which bears his name. The origin of the Gothic Revival presents so many complicated
features, and so difficult is it to distinguish the latest efforts of the old school from the earliest attempts towards its resuscitation, that it would be almost impossible to draw any line which should definitely divide the two periods. The date of the Great Fire of London presents, no doubt, an important boundary between the one and the other. Yet neither to Wren nor to Inigo Jones can be ascribed the first intro- duction of Italian art. So early as the reign of Henry VIII., Hans Holbein had designed the porch of Lord Pembroke's house at Wilton, and some portions of Windsor Castle, in a style which testified the influence of a foreign school. John Thynne, who built old Somerset House in 1567; Robert Adams, superintendent of royal buildings to Queen Elizabeth ; Theodore Havens, who erected Caius College in the same reign ; and one Stickles, who practised in England about 1596, had all adopted this mongrel species of architecture, which it would be incorrect to describe as Gothic. On the other hand, Wren, who had reached a point of excellence in classic design which we have not since seen surpassed, himself not only restored Mediaeval buildings, but raised new ones in imitation of them. This extraordinary man was born on October 20, 163 a (one year
after the birth of Anthony a Wood). He was the son of a clergyman, and the nephew of Dr. Matthew Wren, whose name is prominent in the ecclesiastical history of his times.* He received an excellent education, and no one was better fitted to profit by it. It is recorded that at the age of thirteen he had invented an astronomical machine, and a few * Dr Matthew Wren was impeached by order of the House of Commons in 1641, and
altogether suffered imprisonment for twenty years. Sir Christopher, as a young man, became intimate with Claypole, who had married Cromwell's daughter, and there is an interesting anecdote that 'Mr. Wren' once met the Protector at the house of his son-in- law, and received from his own lips the remission of Dr. Wren's punishment, which he immediately conveyed to his uncle. |
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Sir Christopher Wren. 23
years later made discoveries in astronomy and gnomonics. It is certain
that, at twenty-five, he was made Astronomical Professor at Gresham College, which office he resigned in 1660, for the Savilian professorship at Oxford. His life was a long one, but most actively employed, and it is wonderful to think how, in the midst of his professional labours, and while he was in the height of his practice, he could find leisure for the scientific pursuits which then constituted his chief amusement. At one time, we find him lecturing before the Royal Society (of which he became president) on the nature of ice and the polarity of sapphires, at another discussing the properties of phosphorus : now his opinion is asked regarding the horns of a moose-deer found in some Irish quarry ; then he turns his attention to the art of mezzotint engraving; presently he reappears engaged in experiments relating to artificial incubation, or writes a report on some phenomenon of medical science. In short, he was a man of most versatile talents, and the various details of his useful life afford material for a digression which might be interesting but which would be redundant in these pages. With the Gothic Revival, indeed, Wren's career may seem at first sight to have little in common. Yet it would be a pity to omit any link which joins them, and there is more than one point of contact with that subject, both in his writings and his practice. Up to the age of thirty-one, he had received no public commissions
as an architect. In. 1663, he was employed by Charles II. to prepare designs for a royal palace at Greenwich, and about the same time the erection of the Sheldonian theatre at Oxford was begun under his superintendence. But an event was at hand which soon afforded more ample scope for his abilities. The Great Fire of London, whose ruins covered no less than 436 acres ; which extended from the Tower to the Temple Church, and from the north-east gate to Holborn-bridge ; " which destroyed in the space of four days eighty-nine churches (in- cluding St. Paul's), the City gates, the Royal Exchange, the Custom House, Guildhall, Sion College, and many other public buildings, besides * c 4
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24 Wren on Salisbury Cathedral.
13,200 houses, and laid waste 400 streets, opened a field for practice
which no Government architect had ever found before, or will probably ever find again. Within a few days after the fire, Wren began his plan for rebuilding
the City, to which Mr. Oldenburg, secretary of the Royal Society, alludes in a letter to the Hon. Robert Boyle, dated September 18, 1666. f Dr. Wren has, since my last, drawn a model for a new city, and presented it to the king, who produced it before his council, and manifested much approbation of it. I was yesterday morning with the Doctor, and saw the model, which, methinks, does so well provide for security, convenience, and beauty.' It would appear from this fact that Wren was at that time acting as
the Government architect, and, indeed, the Parentalia fix his appoint- ment as surveyor-general before that period ; but, according to Mr. Elmes (whose life of Wren was published in 1823), that event did not occur till 1669, when he succeeded to the office in place of Sir John Denham, who had previously held it. In 1668 he was employed to survey Salisbury Cathedral. In his
report thereon he speaks of the whole pile as magnificent, and f one of the best patterns of architecture in the age wherein it was built.' He finds fault, however, with the foundations and c poise' of the building, and his remarks on that subject are curious and interesting:— Almost all the cathedrals of the Gothic form (he writes) are weak and de-
fective in the poise of the vault of the aisles ; as for the vaults of the nave they are on both sides equally supported and propped up from spreading by the bows of flying buttresses, which rise from the outward walls of the aisles; but for the vaults of the aisles they are, indeed, supported on the outside by buttresses, but inwardly they have no other stay but the pillars themselves, which, as they are usually proportioned, if they stood alone without the weight above, could not resist the spreading of the aisles one minute ; true, indeed, the great load above of the walls and vaults of the navis should seem to confirm the pillars in their per- pendicular station, that there should be no need of buttresses inward. But experience hath shown the contrary j and there is scarce any Gothic cathedral |
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Seventeenth Century Gothic. 25
that I have seen, at home or abroad, wherein I have not observed the pillar to
yield and bend inwards from the weight of the vault of the aisle ; but this defect is most conspicuous upon the angular pillars of the cross, for there not only the vault wants butment, but also the angular arches that rest upon that pillar; and, therefore, both conspire to thrust it inward towards the centre of the cross, and this is very apparent in the fabric we treat of. For this reason, this form of churches has been rejected by modern architects abroad, who use the better and Roman art of architecture. In 1673 Wren was made a member of the Royal Commission for the
rebuilding of St. Paul's, and at the same period received his appoint- ment as architect to the new structure. From that date up to within a few years before his death his time was actively employed in works of great importance, but which, being of a definitely Italian character, need not here be enumerated. His attempts at Mediaeval design in London were among the later works of his life, and will be presently described. His earlier efforts in that direction appear in a field itself remarkable for the continuity of examples which it affords in illus- tration of Gothic architecture, from the Middle Ages down to the eighteenth century. A tendency to conservatism, a respect for ancient traditions* a
jealousy of changes which it has had no share in originating, are cha- racteristics which have long been associated with the University of Oxford. That this feeling extended to questions beyond those of doc- trine or politics—that it exercised an influence in retaining the old Tudor style of building for colleges at Oxford long after the followers of Palladio had introduced a new fashion of art, no one can reason- ably doubt. Nor is it strange that the members of such an ancient and splendid institution should have been unwilling to reject that venerable type of architecture which already existed in so many local examples, and which prevailed at a period whence its wealth and mignificence were derived. An early specimen of seventeenth century Gothic at Oxford is that
of Wadham College, built on the site of the monastery of Austin Friars |
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26 Works at Oxford.
during the years 1610-13, the first stone having been laid on July 31
in the former year, and the first warden, Dr. Wright, admitted on April 20, 1613. The entrance gateway, groined with fan tracery, is a curious and interesting example of the respect shown for local traditions of design, even when national taste in architecture had undergone a complete change. So excellent in character are the style and construction of the chapel
windows that they have been referred to an earlier period, but the college books contain an account of the expenses incurred during their erection, and thus leave little doubt on the subject.* The interior of the hall contains a good timber roof and oak screen, Gothic in general form, but with Italianised detail. The great south and oriel windows are very fine and remarkable examples of this period. The eastern wing of the Bodleian Library was also completed in
1613, and is a very creditable work, in keeping with the older building to which it was then added. Three years later Sir John Acland built the hall at Exeter College, one of the best specimens of a refectory in Oxford. It was restored and refitted in the early part of this century by Nash. But the general design is still what it was, and it may be questioned whether the former details were not superior to those which replaced them. The late chapel of the same college was erected in 1624. Its interior was divided into two aisles. The windows were considered very good for their date.f It is supposed that no part of the quadrangle is older than the time of James I. Another instance of Jacobean Gothic may be recognised in the hall of
Trinity College, which, although it has undergone some alteration since, was originally erected, with the apartments above it, about 1619. The buildings of Oriel College come under the same class. The
* The late Mr. O. Jewitt, in a careful and ably written essay, read before the Archaeo-
logical Institute at Oxford in 1850, described with great accuracy the tracery of the windows in the chapel and ante-chapel, which, though differing considerably in motive of design and apparently in date, appear to have been executed at one and the same time. f This building was removed some years ago. The present chapel, which will be
described in due course, was erected in 1857-58, from a design by Mr. G. G. Scott, R.A. |
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Thomas Holt. 27
south and west sides of the outer quadrangle were rebuilt about 1620 ;
the northern side, together with the hall and chapel, finished in 1637. They are unpretentious in character, but picturesque in their way, and exceedingly interesting as links in the chain of our present history. Immediately opposite the front of Exeter is that of Jesus College,
originally founded by Queen Elizabeth, but a great portion of the present structure is due to the munificence of Sir Eubule Thelwall, Knt., who held the office of principal in 1621. He built the prin- cipal's lodgings at his own expense, as well as the kitchen, buttery, with chambers over them, and one half of the south side of the first quad- rangle. The chapel, which stands on the north side, was consecrated on May 28, 1621. The east window, by no means a bad specimen of its kind, was added in 1636. The hall was completed by Sir Eubule Thelwall, of whom it is recorded that he c left nothing undone which might conduce to the good of the college.* It contains an elaborately carved screen (Jacobean in its details), and is lighted by a large bay window which forms a conspicuous feature in the quadrangle. The roof, though now hidden by a plaster ceiling, was originally of solid oak, and ornamented with pendents.* In [624 died Thomas Holt, an architect of York, to whose design
many of the University buildings of this period are attributed, and who certainly seems to have respected the ancient traditions of his art in resisting the influence of a foreign taste. According to Parker's f Hand- book ' the groined vault of the passage under the eastern wing of the Bodleian Library (usually called the c Pig market') is a specimen of his skill, as well as many college gateways of the same date and cha- racter. He also designed the c Schools' which had been founded by Sir Thomas Bodley, but who unfortunately did not live to see them The buildings facing the Turl and Market Street were refronted in 1856 under the
superintendence of Messrs. Buckler. The chapel was restored and refitted by Mr. G. h. Street in 1864, when the old oak wainscoting which formerly lined-its walls was removed. |
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28 University College, Oxford.
begun. Holt was buried at Oxford in Holywell churchyard. His
name is little known to posterity ; but admirers of that architecture which he strove to sustain against the tide of popular caprice will cherish his memory with a feeling akin to gratitude. Among the buildings at Oxford erected during Holt's lifetime, if not
designed by himself, is the chapel of Lincoln College, which was built at the expense of Lord Keeper Williams (successively Bishop of Lincoln and Archbishop of York), and consecrated on September 15, 1631. The interior is sixty-two feet long by twenty-six feet in width, and is handsomely furnished with a screen and wainscoting of cedar. It contains some rich and brilliantly coloured glass, some of which is said to have been brought from Italy in 1629.* The south quadrangle of the same college is earlier, having been begun about the year 1612, when Sir Thomas Rotheram, formerly a fellow, gave 300/. towards the expense of its erection. Another specimen of the same school—more important in point of
size, but hardly equal to it in merit—is University College. Although this is one of the oldest foundations in Oxford, and claims King Alfred for its earliest patron, no portion of the present structure existed before the time of Charles I. In 1634 the first stone of the west side was laid, and in the following year the hall and chapel front, as well as the High Street front, were begun. The east side is much later, and was not finished until 1674. One Mr. Greenwood, a fellow of the college, is said to have suggested the design, and to have contributed 1,500/. towards the work. The quadrangle is one hundred feet square, and is entered by a
vault, groined over with fan tracery, and supporting a superstructure which rises a storey higher than the adjacent buildings. The following particulars are added from Parker's c Handbook to Oxford':— * The glass of the east window,'which bears the date 1631, is very curious as indi-
cating a well-defined transition of style from ancient to modem art. The figures are small and represent incidents in the Old and New Testaments, Mediaeval in general design, but evidently influenced by the growing taste for realistic treatment. |
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Charles Church, Plymouth. 29
Over the gate on the north side is a statue of Queen Anne, whilst the niche
in the interior is filled with one of James II., given to the college by Obadiah Walker master, in 1687, who afterwards lost his headship for his adherence to the Church of Rome. The lesser quadrangle measures about 80 ft. square, and is open to the south. The north and east sides, the latter of which is occupied by the master's lodgings, were built about the year 1719. . . . The interior of the chapel—notwithstanding, as Dr. Ingram remarks, the incongruity of Co- rinthian ornaments in a Gothic room—is admired for the elegance of its general appearance, which is much assisted by the groined ceiling and the carving in the style of Gibbons in the oak screen and cedar wainscot which encloses the altar. The present hall was completed about 1657, but the interior entirely
refitted in 1766 at the expense of members of the college whose armo- rial bearings are represented on the wainscot panels. The fireplace bears some resemblance to the canopy of an altar tomb in the Deco- rated period. It was the gift of Sir Roger Newdigate, founder of the well-known university prize for English verse which bears his name. The hall is paved with slabs of Swedish and Danish marble. A library, built over the kitchen and at right angles with the hall, was added in 1669. In 1640 Dr. Saunders, principal of St. Mary Hall, erected, on the
site of an older edifice, the hall and refectory of that foundation, with the chapel above. The windows of the latter building are enclosed by flat-pointed—almost semicircular—arches ; the mullions do not run up straight to the arch head, but branch off in tracery, which intersects at regular intervals and terminates without mitre at the intrados—a form frequently adopted in work of this period. There is a church at Plymouth, commonly called Charles' Church—probably because it was erected in the time of the Stuarts—which has tracery of this description, and is a very curious example of seventeenth century Gothic* ' A petiuon was ordered to be prepared from the Corporation, setting forth the state
of the parish, and praying the king to grant permission for the building of a new church
' upon a piece or parcel of land called or known by the name of the Coney Yard, now
Gayer's Yard, lately given us by John Hcle, of Wembury, Esquire, to that use." The
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30 The Tom Tower, Christchurch.
Coeval with St. Mary Hall is the staircase entrance to the hall of
Christchurch. It is vaulted over with fan tracery of a very chaste and beautiful description. The stairs were altered to their present form by Wyatt, but the groining and central pillar date from 1640, or even earlier. The celebrated Tom Tower, of the same college, was designed by Wren, and, from the prominent position which it occupies, presents one of the most remarkable features in the university. It rises from the great entrance, commonly called the Tom Gate, which formed part of Wolsev's splendid scheme. It is octagonal in form, and intro- duced to the square substructure by that species of huge chamfer or splay which may be observed in other designs by this master, and an intervening panelled storey, on one face of which the clock is placed. On this the upper portion of the tower is raised, its eight sides being pierced to full two-thirds of its height by pointed windows, canopied by an ogival hood-moulding. These windows are divided into two lights, the space above the springing being filled in with tracery, the style of which is copied from late Perpendicular work. Between the windows, and at each angle of the octagon, buttresses occur, terminating below the panelled storey in a corbel and upwards in a crocketted pinnacle. The whole is surmounted by a dome-shaped roof similar in character to those which crown the turrets on either side of the entrance. It was completed in 1682. Act for dividing the parishes passed in 1640, and the church appears to have been com-
menced forthwith; but troublous times were in store for Plymouth; the civil war broke out; the town sided with the Parliament, and during its three years' siege had little time or inclination to proceed with the church to be dedicated to the king In 1645, active steps were taken for completing the building, but it was a long and tiresome job for architect, builder, and employers; and not until 1658 was the church finished, and then minus the spire, which appears not to have been built before 1707. Shortly after the Restoration, the church was consecrated, and ever after went by the name of Charles' Church. 'For its time, Charles' Church—which consists of a nave with aisles, and a chancel not
very deeply recessed—is a remarkably good building. . . The outline of the tower and spire is almost perfect. The east window of the chancel is a fine specimen of geometric tracery. Elsewhere, however, there is a contradiction of styles, and a jumble of Perpendicular, Elizabethan, and classic details.'—Extract from Mr. J. Hine's published paper on ' The Ancient Buildings of Plymouth.' |
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Brasenose College, Oxford. 31
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This example is cited as one of the most important of Wren's Gothic
designs at Oxford. He had, however, made other essays there in the same direction at a much earlier period. The library and chapel of Brasenose College, which were finished in 1663, are ascribed to him. They consist in a curious mixture of the two styles, composite pilasters between two pointed windows, and Mediaeval pinnacles surmounting an Italian cornice. The east window is, however, a very fair imitation of Mediaeval art, and the roof, adorned with fan tracery, shows at least that the example of earlier times was not without influence upon the designer. In addition to those already mentioned, there are several instances in
and near Oxford of buildings which illustrate an attempted revival of Gothic architecture after the accession of Charles II. Among these may be named Islip Church, where the chancel was rebuilt by Dr. Robert South on an ancient model and with tolerable success in 1680.* We must now, however, revert to Wren's work in London, of
which there are one or two examples which bear directly on our subject. The first of these in chronological order was his so-called restoration of the north side of Westminster Abbey and the erection of its towers. Previous to this, however, he had drawn up a report on the state of the building. It was addressed to the Bishop of Rochester, and contains some remarkable observations, not only on the abbey itself but upon Gothic architecture in general. Wren had no doubt a greater con- structive genius than Inigo Jones, and his comments on the structural mistakes committed by Mediaeval builders are often to the point. But it must be remembered that the conditions of the art in which he proved himself so efficient a master, were, and ever will be, utterly dissimilar from those which directed the aim of Mediaeval builders. With an abundant supply of material we may always raise a strong edifice ; but when the external appearance of that edifice is not required to convey _ This church has since been much altered, and under the plea, of restoration the
curious and historically interesting chancel raised by Dr. South has been destroyed. |
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32 Old and New St. Paul s.
an accurate notion of the size or shape of its interior there is absolutely
no limit to the stability which it may assume. Supposing, for instance, St. Paul's had been hewn out of the solid rock, the proportions would have remained unaltered; but there would have been no human science in its strength. This is, of course, a reductio ad absurdum, but it may serve to illustrate a principle. If the superficial area of old St. Paul's be contrasted with that of Wren's building ; if the cubical contents of the one be measured with those of the other ; if the proportion of solid masonry employed in each structure be compared with the available space which it contains ; it may be questioned whether the science displayed in the original building was not of a higher order than that which distinguishes the present edifice. For the former cathedral was in practical reality what it seemed to be, and as it possessed no one con- structive feature which did not serve a purpose, so also no portion of its external appearance belied its internal capacity. Wren's dome, on the contrary, with its elaborate complication of conical walls, penden- tives, iron chains, paraboloid and hyperboloid curves, may be a triumph of mathematical and engineering skill, but, as architecture, is nothing more than a grand and magnificent sham ; and few of those who admire the graceful contour of its outline, towering high above the smoke and dust of busy London, recollect, or were ever aware, that it is a simply ornamental feature, which not only has little connection with the dome they have admired while standing in the choir or nave of St. Paul's, but which, if really executed as it seems to be, would look ugly and disproportionate from within. But Sir Christopher, who did not hesitate to expend thousands of
pounds on a gigantic artifice, and who, for the mere sake of effect, reared this grand but useless portion of his building hundreds of feet into the air, could not forgive the employment of those features of Gothic architecture which he blindly deemed unserviceable in regard both to its construction and embellishment. c Pinnacles,' says he, in his report on Westminster Abbey, c are of no use and little ornament. |
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Wren's Report on Westminster Abbey. 33
The pride of a very high roof raised above reasonable pitch is not of
duration, for the lead is apt to slip, but we are tied to this indiscreet form, and must be content with original faults in the first design.' He then goes on to lament, with some reason, that oak was not more used, instead of chestnut in Westminster Hall and other places, and proceeds td describe the steps he had taken towards the f restoration ':— , First, in repair of the stone work, what is done shows itself. Beginning from
the east window, we have cut out all the ragged ashlar, and invested it with better stone out of Oxfordshire, down the river from the quarries about Burford We have amended and secured the buttresses in the cloister garden, as to the greatest part, and we proceed to finish that side. The chapels on the south are done, and most of the arch buttresses all along as we proceeded. We have not done much on the north side, for these reasons : the houses on the north side * are so close that there is not room left for the raising of scaffolds and ladders, nor for passage for bringing materials ; besides the tenants taking every inch, to the very walls of the church, to be in their leases, this ground, already too narrow, is divided, as the backsides to houses, with wash-houses, chimnies, privies, cellars, the vaults of which if indiscreetly dug against the foot of a but- tress may inevitably ruin the vaults of the chapels (and, indeed, I perceive such mischief is already done by the opening of the vaults of the octagonal chapel on that side), and unless effectual means will be taken to prevent all nuisances of this sort, the works cannot proceed ; and if finished may soon be destroyed . . The angles of pyramids (!) in the Gothic architecture were usually en-
riched with the flower the botanists call calceolus, which is a proper form to help workmen to ascend on the outside to amend any defects, without raising large scaffolds upon every slight occasion. He then alludes to the state in which he found the old western
towers. c It is evident,' he writes, l that they (the towers) were left The appearance of Westminster Abbey in those days must have been very similar to
that presented by many Continental cathedrals in our own time. It seems to have been crowded and built round with tenements of a humble description. Happily these have been long since cleared away; but so little respect was paid to the building, even down to the beginning of this century, that a thoroughfare was permitted right through the nave, and porters lounged there with their loads. |
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34 Wren's Work at Westminster.
imperfect, and have continued so since the dissolution of the monastery,
one being much higher than the other, though still too low for bells, which are stifled by the height of the roof above them ; they ought cer- tainly to be carried to an equal height, one storey above the ridge of the roof, still continuing the Gothic manner in the stone-work and tracery.' He fully recognises the use of the steeple in giving superin- cumbent weight, and therefore stability to the piers below, and attributes to the absence of that feature over the crux a deviation from the per- pendicular, noticeable in the shafts which occur at the intersection of nave and transepts. He proposes that the central tower should be carried up as much above the roof as it is wide, and adds, that if a spire were added to it, It would give a grace to the whole fabric, and the west end of the city, c which seems to want it.' c I have made a design,' he adds, with reference to this scheme, f which will not be very expensive, but light, and still in the Gothic form, and of a style with the. rest of the structure, which I would strictly adhere to throughout the whole intention. To deviate from the whole form would be to run into a dis- agreeable mixture, which no person of a good taste could relish.' How far Sir Christopher maintained this resolution—or rather, let us
say, how far he understood the characteristics of that noble building which he thus undertook to restore and even to improve upon—those who examine his work at Westminster with a critical eye will soon determine. The best that can be urged in his favour is that he worked according to the light which was in him, and that the stone which. he employed in his repairs was of more durable kind than that of which most of the original masonry was composed. But there are few, perhaps, among us who would not have preferred even the crumbling relics of the ancient building to the cold and uninteresting patchwork which now defaces the north transept. We find heavy circular discs replacing boss-work of the most delicate description, and huge acorn- shaped lumps of stone where formerly many a chastely profiled corbel was in service. The old arch mouldings are, indeed, copied with |
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Westminster Abbey Towers, 35
tolerable accuracy here and there, but the rich and crisp leafage of the
Early English capitals is feebly imitated in that lifeless carving which forms its present substitute. As for the western towers, they are too well known to need much comment here. But when we examine their heavy horizontal lines of cornice and string-course, their circular panels crowned by hideous pediments (which, to use Wren's own words, can be c of no use and little ornament') ; when we raise our eyes to the ugly, uncusped tracery of their upper windows, and that bungling ogival hood-mould which surrounds them, or still higher to the clumsy truss-work which supports the topmost pinnacles—we can but lament that a man whose fame has been transmitted to pos- terity as the greatest architect whom England has produced should have been thus associated with the degradation of one of her fairest monuments. Crude and unsatisfactory as Wren's attempts at design in Pointed
architecture undoubtedly were, it is impossible not to regard them with interest when we remember that they formed exceptions not only to the popular taste of their day, but to the unparalleled successes of their author himself. That Sir Christopher ever adopted a style in which he saw few merits, and such merits as certainly are not pre-eminently cha- racteristic of that style, must always appear strange. It is difficult to imagine that a mind which could conceive such an edifice as St. Paul's could have much sympathy with the spirit of Medieval buildings. But it is stranger still, if he admired them at all—and Wren certainly pro- fessed to do so—that he should have been so utterly incapable of recog- nising or imitating the most essential elements of their grace. Yet it was better that such churches as St. Mary Aldermary and St. Dunstan's- in-the-East should be erected than that the use of the Pointed arch should be clean forgotten in our metropolis. They are, indeed, melan- choly examples of Gothic art, but any examples which date from such a period become valuable links in the history of its revival. The year in which St. Mary Aldermary was completed is quoted by
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36 St. Mary Aldermary.
Elmes as 1711. His authority is doubtless from the ' Parentaiia, or
Memoirs of the Wren Family,' published by Sir Christopher's grandson, in 1750. But the ' Parentaiia,' as Elmes himself points out, contain many chronological errors, and probably this is one of them. According to a tablet on its walls, St. Mary Aldermary was opened for public service in 1682.* The original church had been burnt down in the Great Fire. It was rebuilt at the cost of one Henry Rogers, on the same plan as the old building, which will to some extent account for the style, and for the fact that the east wall of the chancel is not at right angles with the nave, an accident which we may be sure Wren's love of eurythmia would not have permitted had he not been compelled to ad- here to the ancient boundary by some stringent conditions. It consists of a nave and two aisles, each roofed over inside by plaster groining. That over the nave (which is lighted by clerestory windows) is divided into circular panels decorated with cusping and filled in the centre with floral enrichment. The panels which occur over the aisles are oval in plan, and some are pierced as skylights.j- They are surrounded at their outer edge by leaf ornament. These panels are met and inter- sected by groining, which springs from slender attached shafts, over each pier in the nave, and from small corbels in the aisles. Below the base line of these shafts, and in the spandrels of the nave arches, is introduced stonework carved with shields, scrolls, and cherubim. The latter are no doubt intended to be grotesque, for they wear grimaces seldom seen in this ordinary type of plethoric celestiality. They are, however, very far removed from that school of conventional art which Ruskin has called ' noble grotesque,' and, indeed, the whole ■ ! S
* The inscription runs thus:—'This church was pav'd and wainscoted at ye charge of
both parishes, namely, St. Mary Aldermary and St. Tho. ye Apostle, and also opened in ye year of our Lord God, 1682. Ralph Smith, &c. Churchwardens.' f The north aisle wall is decorated internally by blank windows, in imitation of those
on the opposite side. They never were constructed to admit light: in fact, when the church was rebuilt, this wall abutted on some adjoining buildings (now removed). Hence the necessity of skylights. |
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iiiiiiiiiiiwiiiiiriiiiiimmrai
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SA Mary Aldermary. 37
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of the carving, though clever in its way, is anything but Gothic in
character.
The east window consists of five lights, divided by a heavy transom
of peculiar section. Each light has a cinquefoil head. The chancel is roofed by a segmental vault, of which the central compartment is oval, and the rest is divided into little oblong panels, with ogival trefoiled heads, such as are common in late Perpendicular work. By this ar- rangement, the obliquity of the east gable-wall, which has been already mentioned, is made less apparent. This ceiling is also executed in plaster. The arches of the nave are flat-pointed, and appear to have been struck from four centres, though the contour of their intrados is such as almost to justify the belief that it is elliptical in parts. A string-course, which runs down the nave, just above the apex of each arch divides them from the clerestory windows. The piers are similar in plan to those of many Tudor churches in the west of England, and consist of three-quarter shafts stopping against a plain face, and sepa- rated by a hollow, which is carried round the arch. The bases occur about four feet from the ground, the rest of the pier being boxed in by wainscoting. The base moulding is very peculiar, and unlike any example of even late genuine Gothic. In section it resembles the profile of an Early English cap inverted. Three-light windows occur in the clerestory and south aisle. Neither the font, pulpit, nor altarpiece can be said to have any pre-
tensions to a Gothic form. The first bears date 1682. The last is a composite design, not inelegant of its kind, and distinguished by some good carving which has been attributed to Grinlm Gibbons. An incised slab in the pavement describes it as the gift of Dame Jane Smith, relict of a worthy knight of that name. The old tower, which escaped destruction during the Fire, is still standing, and bears evidence of Wren's repair in its upper windows and other portions of the detail. The organ and organ gallery are later in date, and belong to that class of design which is ignominiously known as < carpenter's Gothic' |
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38 St. Dunstan's-in-the-East\
In the year 1699 Wren finished the spire of St. Dunstan's-in-the-
East. The body of the church had only been repaired by him. This latter portion of the structure was taken down early in the present century and rebuilt by Mr. Laing, then architect to the Custom House,* so that the tower is all that remains there of Wren's work, and therefore all that it is now necessary to describe. Including the spire, which occupies about one-third of its height, it
stands 167 ft. from the ground. The tower itself is divided into three storeys, of which the lower are strengthened by buttresses placed anglewise at each corner. Above the second storey these become octa- gonal turrets, surmounted by pinnacles above the parapet. From the base of these pinnacles spring flying buttresses in an elliptical curve, and the latter meeting together form the base of a spire, pierced with lights at its lower end, but terminating in solid masonry above. The union of the buttresses with the spire is ingeniously managed by carrying up the stonework in stepped courses over the last voussoir of each arch, and thus forming a firm foundation for the superstructure. It is remarkable that these steps are not c weathered' after the manner of ordinary buttresses, yet so excellent is the quality of the stone em- ployed that it does not seem to have suffered the slightest decay, and indeed the whole of the masonry of this portion appears as sound as if it had been just executed. The spire itself is octagonal in plan and crowned at the top by a
flat-headed finial, gilt ball, and weathercock. Small pinnacles occur in the centre of the parapet on each side of the tower, after a fashion very prevalent in Somersetshire churches. The base of the tower, which is at the west end of the building, forms a porch roofed over inside with a spherical vault panelled a la Renaissance. The south and west door- ways are spanned by a pointed arch, of which the tympanum is of panelled stonework pierced for light in the centre, and supported by a * With the assistance of Mr. (now Sir William) Tite, who supplied the design and
superintended its execution. •-;,. |
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Tower of St. Dunstans. 39
lower segmental arch which forms the door-head. The central storey
of the tower contains on the east and west sides a circular window, foiled with eight cusps, and enclosed by a square moulded panel. A similar space on the north and south sides is allotted to a clock, which is marked with the date 1681. These circular windows, and the tracery of those in the upper storey, are among the best features of the tower. The spire itself, though lamentably deficient in purity of detail, has a certain picturesque character of its own, which the sound and straight- forward principles on which it was built could not fail to impart. Mr. Elmes, in his ( Life of Wren/ alludes to it in terms of unmeasured praise. f Of this masterpiece of construction/ says he, £ it is not too much to say that it stands unrivalled for elegance, beauty, and science. When Sir Christopher designed this steeple, the noblest monument of geo- metrical and construct he skill in existence (!), and unequalled also for lightness and elegance, he had doubtless those of St. Nicholas, at New- castle-on-Tyne, and of the High Church, Edinburgh, in his mind, but he has surpassed them in every essential quality.' There is an anecdote, unauthenticated by any data, concerning this
tower, that Wren, though convinced of the accuracy of his calculations for its stability, and of the theories which had guided him in its design, felt some apprehension as the time drew near for the practical test of his skill. He is said to have watched the removal of the framework which had supported the spire during its construction, through a telescope from London Bridge, and to have felt great relief when a rocket announced that all was safe. Failure at such a moment might, indeed, have damaged his professional reputation, great as it then was, to say nothing of the terrible consequences which must have .attended an accident; but we may question whether a man of such profound mathematical attainments, and of so vast a practical experience as Sir Christopher, could have so far underrated his capabilities as to doubt on such a point at all. Indeed, it is well known that on one occasion when he was informed that there had been a hurricane on the previous night |
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!
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4o St. Michael's, ComhilL
which had damaged all the steeples in London, he replied at once, c Not
St. Dunstan's, I am sure.' St. Alban's, Wood Street, may be mentioned as another of Wren's
attempts at Gothic, but it is hardly worth description. It was finished in 1685. St. Michael's, in Cornhill, was a more important work. The tower
appears to have been completed from Wren's design in 1722. It bears some resemblance to that of Magdalen College, and is divided into four storeys, of which the second and third are lighted by semicircular headed windows, exhibiting a huge hollow jamb in their external reveal. They are divided by mullions into two lights. The upper windows are much longer and narrower than the others, and are separated by a buttress which stops upon a string- course below. The lights are labelled with the same ugly type of ogival drip-stone, which may be recognised in most of Wren's Gothic designs. Octagonal turrets, round which the horizontal string-courses break, and which are decorated with corbel heads, occur at each angle of the tower, and are carried up to some height above its main walls, terminating in four heavy-looking ogival fmials. The intermediate buttress is also carried up, and finishes with a pinnacle above the parapet, which is battlemented in two awkward- looking courses, evidently parodied from the Magdalen tower.* It was almost the last work which Wren lived to see carried out.
He had now reached a great age, and it is sad to think that his last days had been embittered by the disgraceful cabals of ungenerous rivalry. The commissioners for conducting the rebuilding of St. Paul's intrigued against him. Wren petitioned the Queen that he might be freed from their interference. Had her Majesty lived, it is probable that he might have defied his enemies to the last. But Anne died in 1714, and when the Elector succeeded to the throne he was surrounded by his countrymen, with whom Benson, an architect of mean pretensions * The modern restorations of this church were executed from the designs of Mr. G. G.
Scott, R.A. ".*•■-• • -■ -i |
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Death of Wren. 41
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and unscrupulous effrontery, managed to become a favourite. The old
Commission at length expired, and in 1715 a new one was issued. The king was prevailed on to supersede Wren's patent as surveyor- general. His consent must have mortified Wren, but it certainly dis- graced himself. In his eighty-sixth year, this good and faithful servant of the crown was dismissed from an office which he had held during four reigns, and for a period of nearly half a century. Benson was installed in his place, only to lose it on the first occasion, when his gross inca- pacity became manifest. Wren retired to his residence at Hampton Court, coming up to town, however, from time to time for the purpose of inspecting the repairs of Westminster Abbey, and other works which were being still carried out under his superintendence. In one of these excursions he caught a cold, which possibly may have hastened his end. But he died at last peacefully, after falling asleep in his arm-chair, on the 25th of February, 1723. |
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42 Horace Walpole.
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CHAPTER III.
F in the history of British art there is one period more distin-
guished than another for its neglect of Gothic, it was certainly the middle of the eighteenth century. In a pre- vious age architects had not been wanting who endeavoured to per- petuate the style whenever occasion offered, and when the taste of their clients raised no obstacle. Wren had himself condescended to imitate in practice those principles of design which he despised in theory. But these were exceptional cases, and, as time advanced, and the new doctrine spread more widely, they became still rarer. Nor did the lovers of archeology much help the waning cause. The old antiquarians were dead, or had ceased from their labours. Their suc- cessors had not yet begun to write. An interval occurred between the works of Dugdale and Dodsworth, of Herbert and Wood, on the one side, and those of Grose, Bentham, Hearn, and Gough, on the other.— between the men who recorded the history of Medieval buildings in England, and the men who attempted to illustrate them. In this interval an author appeared who did neither, but to whose writings and to whose influence as an admirer of Gothic art we believe may be ascribed one of the chief causes which induced its present revival. * Horace Walpole, third son of the Minister, Sir Robert Walpole, first
Earl of Orford, was born in 1718. At the age of twenty his fortune was secured by some valuable sinecures, and he thus found himself enabled at an early period of his life to indulge in those tastes and pursuits which to him seemed of much more importance than his Parliamentary duties, and which have combined to render his name so famous. It is impossible to peruse either the letters or the romances of this
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JValpoles Taste for Gothic. 43
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remarkable man without being struck by the unmistakable evidence
which they contain of his Mediaeval predilections. His ( Castle of Otranto' was perhaps the first modern work of fiction which depended for its interest on the incidents o{ a chivalrous age, and it thus became the prototype of that class of novel which was afterwards imitated by Mrs. Ratcliffe and perfected by Sir Walter Scott. The feudal tyrant, the venerable ecclesiastic, the forlorn but virtuous damsel, the castle itself, with its moats and drawbridge, its gloomy dungeons and solemn corridors, are all derived from a mine of interest which has since been worked more efficiently and to better profit. But to Walpole must be awarded the credit of its discovery and first employment. The position which he occupies with regard to art resembles in many
respects that in which he stands as a man of letters. His labours were not profound in either field. But their result was presented to the public in a form which gained him rapid popularity both as an author and a dilettante. As a collector of curiosities he was probably in- fluenced more by a love of old world associations than by any sound appreciation of artistic design. In this spirit he haunted the auction rooms, and picked up a vast quantity of objects that were destined by- and-by to crowd his villa at Twickenham. Nothing to which the faintest semblance of a legend attached was too insignificant for his notice. Queen Mary's comb, King William's spur, the pipe which Van Tromp smoked in his last naval engagement, or the scarlet hat of Cardinal Wolsey, possessed for him an extraordinary interest. But among these relics he acquired much that was really valuable in the way of old china and stained glass, and thus formed the nucleus of what at one time promised to become an important Medieval museum. The acquisition of these treasures could not but influence his taste, which has been ably defined by an eminent writer of our own day. ' He had/ says Lord Macaulay, £ a strange ingenuity peculiarly his own, an ingenuity which appeared in all that he did, in his building, in his gardening, in his upholstery, in the matter and in the manner of |
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44 Strawberry IHll.
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his writings. If we were to adopt the classification—not a very accu-
rate classification—which Akenside has given of the pleasures of the imagination, we should say that with the Sublime and the Beautiful Walpole had nothing to do, but that the third province, the Odd, was his peculiar domain.' It was probably this eccentricity of taste, com- bined with his fondness of Mediaeval lore, which induced him to imitate, in the design of his own dwelling, a style of architecture which by this time had fallen into almost universal contempt. On the grounds now known as Strawberry Hill, there existed,
towards the middle of the last century, a small cottage, built by a person who had been coachman to the Earl of Bradford. It was ori- ginally intended for a lodging house, but the Fates had decreed for it a more honourable use. Even before the occupancy of the owner with whose name it will be for ever associated, it had become the residence of some notable people. The famous Colley Gibber once lived there. Dr. Talbot, then Bishop of Durham, and the Marquis of Caernarvon (afterwards Duke of Chandos), had been its tenants. It was afterwards hired by Mrs. Cheuevix, a dealer in toys, at that time well known in London. It does not appear that there was anything of a Gothic character in the original structure, but it struck Walpole's fancy. He first purchased the lease of Mrs. Chenevix, and the following year bought the fee simple, of the estate. In a letter to Mr. (afterwards Marshal) Conway, dated June 8th, 1747, Walpole announced that he had taken possession. ' You perceive by my date/ he writes, c that I am got into a new camp, and have left my tub at Windsor. It is a little plaything house that I got out of Mrs. Chenevix's shop, and is the prettiest bauble you ever- saw.' This small and whimsical abode Walpole enlarged at various times
between the years 1753 and 1776. He did not take down the old work but altered it to suit his taste, and added to it bit by bit, so that the whole at length became a straggling but not unpicturesque mass of buildings. c It was,' says an old writer, £ the amusement of his leisure; |
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Strawberry Hill. 45
and, circumscribed in its dimensions as it is now seen, it enabled him to
perform with sufficient success his original intention, which was that of adapting the more beautiful portions of English or 'Gothic castellated and ecclesiastical architecture to the purposes of a modern villa. A wide and somewhat novel field was here opened for the exercise of taste. The task was precisely suited to the talent of the designer; and this choice specimen of the picturesque effect which may be produced by a combination of the graces of ancient English style, even when those beauties are unaided by the ivyed mellowness of time, has greatly assisted in introducing a passion for the Gothic' Just as the little cottage of Mrs. Chenevix grew into a villa under
Walpole's care, so the villa which Walpole designed has since deve- loped into a mansion. Within the last few years a new wing has been added by its present owner, the Countess Waldegrave, and the old work has been so completely renovated that it is not at first easy to trace the original foi *m of old Strawberry Hill amid the various embellishments which surround it. The principal entrance was formerly by the road- side—an arrangement which may have answered very well in Walpole's time, but in these days of busy traffic would hardly have ensured sufficient privacy to the inmates. A piece of ground, therefore, which now forms a portion of the garden, was reclaimed from the highway, and a new road formed round it in exchange. The old entrance was by a low pointed arch from which a narrow corridor led on the left hand to an inner door. This passage is decorated with mural arcuation, consisting of slender attached shafts, and tracery in low relief, the bays being separated by canopied niches, enriched internally with carved work in imitation of groining. The crockets employed in this work are of that feeble type which characterised the latest and most debased Jacobean Gothic, and the little corbels are executed in the acorn pattern which Wren so extensively used. The main walls are of brick or rubble masonry, rough cast with
plaster. Many of the doors and windows on the north side are spanned |
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46 Strawberry Hill,
by a pointed arch. On the first floor are several oriel and bay windows,
constructed of wood, of which the upper portions are filled with stained glass. They are surmounted by a light cornice crested with wooden tracery. The west wing, in which Walpole set up his printing-press, is a battlemented building two storeys in height. It is lighted by square windows, divided by what seem to be modern casement frames into two and three compartments, and labelled above with an imitation of a Tudor drip-stone. The portion of the building nearest the Thames is evidently the oldest part, and is said to have been the actual cottage purchased of Mrs. Chenevix. It presents two fronts, one facing the west and the other the south. A semi-octagonal porch projects from each side. The pointed windows of this wing are remarkable as bearing more resemblance to Venetian Gothic than to any English example. Their arches are cusped once on either side and terminate in that abrupt ogival curve, of which so many examples may be seen from the Grand Canal. The likeness is the more striking because the plaster is carried up to the edge of the intrados, and thus leaves the arch with no appa- rent voussoir. There are two storeys of these windows, the upper floor being lighted by simple quatrefoil openings about three feet across. A battlemented parapet crowns the whole. The latter feature is probably executed in lath and plaster. It is certain that the coping of both merlons and embrasures is of wood, and that wooden pinnacles occur at the angles and at regular intervals along the front. The porches on the south and east sides (also battlemented) are carried up two storeys in height. Over the east porch a stepped gable rises, lighted by an oriel window and ornamented at its upper end by a wooden cross let in flush with the plaster. At the apex of the roof is another (Maltese) cross by way of finial. The east corner of the south front is occupied by an apartment now used as a study, but which was formerly the dining-room, or, as Walpole would have it, the * refectory.' It is lighted by a bay window rectangular in plan and surmounted by a wooden cresting. In the storey immediately above this is the library window, divided into three |
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MM^MiMMMHil^^^B^HMMi^Hai
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Strawberry Hill. 47
lights by slender wooden columns. The arch over this window differs
from the rest in having a flat double cusp on either side, but terminates like the others in an ogival curve. It is filled with rich stained glass. On either side above it, and lighting the same chamber, are two quatrefoil openings similar to those we have described. A chimney shaft projects on the east side and is carried up straight to about three-fourths of its height, where it is splayed back in the usual manner. The window heads of the south porch are flatter than the rest, but preserve the same general outline. The picture gallery runs from east to west, connecting the original
tenement with the round central tower and attached staircase-turret, which Walpole built, and which have been lately carried up an addi- tional storey in height. The west front of the gallery (standing about thirty feet from the ground) is. divided into bays by buttresses, and contains two storeys, whereof the lower is occupied by servants' offices. The windows of each floor are spanned by four-centred Tudor arches. The voussoirs and quoins appear to be of stone—at all events in some portions of the work ; but the whole has been so plastered over in successive renovations that it is difficult to distinguish the solid masonry from rubble-work. The upper windows are labelled with late drip-stone mouldings. The round central tower, which forms an important feature in the group, has a battlemented parapet running round the wall over a corbelled string-course. The interior, or rather that portion of it which Walpole designed,
is just what one might expect from a man who possessed a vagul admiration for Gothic without the knowledge necessary for a proper adaptation of its features. Ceilings, screens, niches, &c, are all copied, or rather parodied, from existing examples, but with utter disregard for the original purpose of the design. To Lord Orford, Gothic was Gothic, and that sufficed. He would have turned an altar-slab into a hall table, or made a cupboard of a piscina, with the greatest com- placency if it only served his purpose. Thus we find that in the north |
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48 Strawberry Hill.
bed-chamber, when he wanted a model for his chimney-piece, he thought
he could not do better than adopt the form of Bishop Dudley's tomb in Westminster Abbey. He found a pattern for the piers of his garden- gate in the choir of Ely Cathedral. It is to be feared that his lordship's enthusiasm not only led him to copy such portions of ancient work, but sometimes to appropriate fragments of an original structure. Unfor- tunately his example has been imitated by collectors even in our own time. The picture gallery was supposed to be Walpole's chef-dceuvre. It
is fifty-six feet long, seventeen feet high, and thirteen feet wide. The design of the ceiling was borrowed from an aisle in Henry the Seventh's chapel, and is rich in pendants and panelled work. The principal entrance to this apartment is copied from the north door of St. Alban's, and the two smaller doors are parts of the same design. The most richly decorated side of the room is to some extent in imitation of Archbishop Bouchier's tomb at Canterbury. It has five canopied recesses, and is elaborately enriched throughout.* There is a small building in the garden still called the f chapel,'
though whether that name should be retained for a room which a congregation of six people would inconveniently crowd may be doubted. Its greatest length, including the porch, is not more than fifteen feet. Internally it is about eight feet wide. The inner portion is on a sort of quatrefoil plan, of which three sides are roofed with * The completion of Walpole's villa caused a great deal of sensation at the time, and its
merits were freely discussed by the press. Some doggerel rhymes concerning it appeared in a paper called the 'Craftsman.' The first stanza is as follows:— ' Some cry up Gunnersbury,
For Sion some declare :
And some say that with Chiswick House No villa can compare :
But ask the beaux of Middlesex Who know the country well,
If Strawb'ry Hill—if Strawb'ry Hill Don't bear away the bell?'
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Walpoles Gothic. 49
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plaster groining, and the fourth is left open to the porch. Ribs spring
from each angle towards a quadrilateral space above, from which a pen- dant hangs. Each side forms a recess, of three faces, separated by a slender attached column. The front of the porch is executed in Portland stone, and is really a
very creditable performance if we consider the time at which it was erected. The upper portion is principally occupied by a three-light window spanned by a flat four-centred arch. The sill of this window is formed by a heavy stone transom, which separates it from a doorway and little window below. Three small niches occur on either side, moulded and canopied with some delicacy of workmanship. The ex- treme corners of the front are decorated with octagonal shafts panelled in their upper portions. The whole of the carving, and, indeed, the general design of the
chapel, has been executed with great care and more attention to detail than one might expect from such a period. Walpole's Gothic, in short, though far from reflecting the beauties of a former age, or anti- cipating those which were destined to proceed from a redevelopment of the style, still holds a position in the history of English art which commands our respect, for it served to sustain a cause which had other- wise been well-nigh forsaken. In tracing the history of any particular branch of art or science it is
often needful, if only for the sake of continuity, to take cognisance of facts which in themselves seem unimportant, and of personages whose names, but for the object of research, might remain in the oblivion to which they have long been consigned. It is trusted that this will be deemed a sufficient excuse for a reference to the works of an architect whose connection with the subject before us is interesting only because it is curious. The age in which Batty Langley lived was an age in which it was
customary to refer all matters of taste to rule and method. There was one standard of excellence in poetry—a standard that had its |
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50 Pedantry of the Renaissance.
origin in the smooth distichs of heroic verse which Pope was the first
to perfect, and which hundreds of later rhymers who lacked his nobler powers soon learned to imitate. In pictorial art, it was the grand school which exercised despotic sway over the efforts of genius, and limited the painter's inventions to the field of Pagan mythology. In architec- ture, Vitruvius was the great authority. The graceful majesty of the Parthenon—the noble proportions of the Temple of Theseus—the chaste enrichment which adorns the Choragic monument of Lysicrates, were ascribed less to the fertile imagination and refined perceptions of the ancient Greek, than to the dry and formal precepts which were invented centuries after their erection. Little was said of the magnifi- cent sculpture which filled the metopes of the Temple of Minerva; but the exact height and breadth of the triglyphs between them were considered of the greatest importance. The exquisite drapery of Caryatids and Canephorce no English artist a hundred years ago thought fit to imitate; but the cornices which they supported were measured inch by inch with the utmost nicety. Ingenious devices were invented for enabling the artificer to repro-
duce, by a series of complicated curves, the profile of a Doric capital, which probably owed its form to the steady hand and uncontrolled taste of the designer. To put faith in many of the theories pro- pounded by architectural authorities in the last century would be to believe that some of the grandest monuments which the world has ever seen raised owe their chief beauty to an accurate knowledge of arithmetic. The diameter of the column was divided into modules ; the modules were divided into minutes; the minutes into fractions of themselves. A certain height was allotted to the shaft, another to the entablature. These proportions might vary certainly, but such variation entirely depended upon whether the £ order ' was mutular or denticular (in other words, whether the cornice was ornamented with a few large projecting blocks or a great number of little ones), and whether the capital was simply moulded, or carved into the form of |
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Batty Langley. 51
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acanthus leaves. Sometimes the learned discussed how far apart the
columns of a portico might be. To the ordinary mind this would soon resolve itself into a question of light and facility of access. But in the days to which we allude they called things by grand names, and the eustyle and diastyle each had their supporters. Batty Langley, who had no doubt well read his Vitruvius and knew
to a decimal point the orthodox height and projection of every feature in the five orders, possessed, with all his classical predilections, an undercurrent of admiration for Mediaeval art. It was an admiration, however, not untempered by disdain, and, perhaps, when he gazed on the mysterious grandeur of our English cathedrals, he felt what he conceived to be a generous pity that such large and important works should have been undertaken in ages which appeared to him so dark and barbarous in their notions of design. The style had some merit certainly. It was pretty and fanciful. It would do very well for a porch in the country or for a summer-house ; but jf it was ever con- templated to employ it again in buildings of any importance, some- thing must be done to modify the style—that was certain. The question remained how this could be managed. Here was a crude and unmethodical order of architecture which resembled neither Doric nor Corinthian, whose columns were sometimes two diameters high and sometimes twenty, and might be, as far as rules were concerned, two hundred. All sorts of foliage were used in the capitals. The cornice profiles were eternally varying, and, worse than all, those ignorant Goths had directly violated the most obvious principles of eurythmia. Could nothing be done to improve the style and rescue it from utter degradation ? Mr. Batty Langley thought that he would try. It was perhaps a somewhat ambitious venture ; but, after all, what
advantages had Boyden and de Bek, Thomas of Canterbury, and Wilham of Wykeham, compared with the erudition of the eighteenth century ? Our reformer was, as we have said, well versed in those mysterious relations of shaft and capital, column and entablature, which |
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52 Gothic Architecture 'Improved!
characterised the designs of Palladio. It occurred to him that some
such system might be applied with advantage to Gothic architecture. He actually imagined that by assimilating the proportions of Mediaeval features to those of the Classic school or by grafting Gothic mouldings on an Italian facade, he should be able to produce a style which would rival, if not surpass, any building which had been. raised during the Middle Ages ; that because the folly of the late Renaissance designers had attached a false importance to modules and minutes, a like system of measurement would ennoble and purify an art which included among its examples the choir of Ely Cathedral and the chapter-house of York Minster. Accordingly, in the year of grace 1742, a work appeared in the form
of a neat folio volume with this astounding title :—- c Gothic Architecture, improved by Rules and Proportions in many
Grand Designs of Columns, Doors, Windows, Chimney-peices, Arcades, Colonades, Porticos, Umbrellos (!), Temples and Pavillions, &c, with Plans, Elevations, and Profiles ; geometrically explained by B. and T. Langley.' These gentlemen, whose book appears to have been subsequently
accompanied by text which few have had the good fortune to peruse,* begin by announcing the discovery of five new orders of columns, plain and enriched; and then proceed to show their application to the various features of a dwelling c in the Gothick manner.' The entire height of the first order they divide into eleven parts, whereof one is given to the subplinth, half to the base of the column, seven to the shaft, another half to the capital, and the remaining two to the entabla- ture, which, by the way, is in its turn subdivided into architrave, frieze, and cornice, after the Roman fashion. The upper members of the cornice are the ordinary cyma, fillets, and corona of Italian design, but, in place of the bed-mouldings, a huge cavetto succeeds, enriched with * The British Museum copy contains illustrations only; the letter-press probably appeared
in a later edition. |
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The Five Orders Gothicised. 53
a sort of trefoil panelling and separated from the frieze below by a
bird's beak and reversed cyma moulding. The rest of the features are parodied in a most preposterous manner from the Classic school. The metopes become quatrefoil panels ; the triglyphs are grooves with cusped and pointed heads. The plan of the shaft itself is quatrefoil, and a careful diagram shows how it may be fluted with advantage. The base-mouldings are of that type which may be occasionally seen at the foot of an iron column in a monster railway-station. A page or so farther on we have the same order with more elaborate enrichments : the corona bears lozenge-shaped dies, raised upon a sunk ground; the cyma, torus, and minor mouldings are decorated after a manner peculiar to Mr. Langley, and which, if not very graceful in itself, has at least the merit of originality. Acanthus leaves crop up in the cavetto, the tri- glyphs are hung with strings of beads, and the whole presents an appear- ance of incongruity which it would be hardly possible to match else- where. The most extraordinary feature of these designs is the great trouble the author has given himself to work out every detail employed. The elevations are projected from plans with the nicest accuracy; each feature is set out with unerring care, and the engravings themselves are remarkably good and carefully executed. Of the other so-called f orders ' in this curious book it will be suffi-
cient to say that each surpasses the last in absurdity. Now and then one finds a crude attempt to embody the characteristics of Pointed Art in the way of decoration, but, as a rule, the ornament introduced is at once feeble and vulgar, and reflects about as much of the spirit of classic or Gothic design as may be recognised in the proportions of a modern bed-post. Batty Langley's ideas of pointed doors and windows were not a whit
better. It is singular that they should be conspicuous for that fault which Mr. Ruskin deftly pointed out as one of the chiefest signs of debased Gothic. The impost of the arch is almost always omitted, and where it does occur it is rarely moulded, and never enriched with |
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54 Batty Langley s Designs.
carving. Langley has, moreover with that fatuity which marked all
the Mediaeval revivalists, insisted on inventing a new species of crocket, which has precisely missed the spirit, and reversed the principle, of that useful feature in genuine work. It does not seem to bud from, but rather to creep up, the hood-moulding or pinnacle to which it is attached. Sometimes a battlemented cornice is introduced over a porch. But merlons and embrasures are all numbered, and the height and width of each bear a certain proportion to some unit which forms the basis of the whole design. As for the £ porticos ' and c umbrellos,' the arcades and colonnades,
which are included in the work, they are simply Italian in general outline, with a bastard detail, which one can only call Gothic because it can be called nothing else. Any carpenter's foreman could now use his pencil to better purpose. The chimney-pieces have as much affinity with the art of the Middle Ages as the monuments which may be bought of a New Road statuary. The f temples' are Mediaeval in the same sense as similar structures at Cremorne or Rosherville. Posterity may wonder whether any of these remarkable works were ever executed— whether men in whose hearts was still cherished a lingering love of Old English architecture put any faith in this eccentric, vain enthusiast— what his contemporaries thought of him—whether he shared the con- tempt which fell upon Ripley, or forgave Lord Pembroke for recom- mending his rival Labelye's designs for Westminster Bridge in pre- ference to his own. Certain it is that Batty Langley's commissions were not numerous, nor do those which he undertook reflect much credit on their author. His name is chiefly remembered in association with the singular but now worthless volume on whose title-page it is inscribed. Gothic architecture has had it vicissitudes in this country. There was a time when its principles were universally recognised; there was a time when they were neglected or forgotten. But in the days of its lowest degradation, it may be questioned whether it would not have been better that the cause should have remained unespoused than have been sustained by such a champion as Batty Langley, |
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The l Georgian ' Era. 55
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CHAPTER IV.
LTHOUGH the eighteenth century was, on the whole, more
distinguished for its neglect of Mediaeval architecture than the age which preceded or the age which followed that period, still many examples of the style exist, which were certainly erected during the reigns of the first Georges. Among these is the gateway on the east side of the second quadrangle at Hampton Court. A reference to early plans of the palace will show that a considerable portion of that facade was remodelled later than the reign of Oueen Anne; and, indeed, a stone tablet inserted in the wall immediately above the apex of the arch contains the initials Gn. R., and the date 1732. This work derives especial interest from two remarkable facts. In the first place, it was executed after Wren's classic additions to Hampton Court, and midway between the stately quadrangle and the Ionic colonnade which contributed no little to his fame, and which, in his own day, no doubt commanded universal admiration. That an architect within a few years after Sir Christopher's death, and while the taste for Italian art which he had so ably encouraged was at its height, should have ventured on a design whose principles were diametrically opposed to those held and taught by so great a master, is notable in itself. But this is not all. The building thus altered had been originally Gothic, it is true, but Gothic of a very different kind from that which was subsequently engrafted on it. Every one familiar with that example of the Tudor style will remember the low four-centred arches which span the older gateways of Hampton Court. If any form of Mediaeval architecture found favour in the last century, it was certainly that which had prevailed during the reign of Henry VII. |
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56 Additions to Hampton Court.
The most obvious course for an architect to pursue under the circum-
stances would have been to adopt, in any alterations of the palace, the style in which it had been originally conceived. That, however, was not done in the instance mentioned. The entrance archway is not a four-centred, but an Early Pointed arch. The windows above it belong more to the Transition, or to the Decorated, than to the Per- pendicular period, while the whole design bears the impress of an originality in design which is unusual in work of this date, and seems to indicate that it was undertaken by some one who possessed some- thing more than the mere skill of a copyist. The gateway is enclosed by two semi-octagonal turrets (decorated
with,string-courses and medallion heads) which rise above the battle- mented parapet, and are surmounted by stone cupolas, octagonal in plan and ogival in profile, terminating in finials of the same character. The wall space between these turrets is divided into three storeys, in the uppermost of which is a window partitioned by mullions into four lights, whereof the two central ones rise higher than the others, and are included in an ogival arch round which a drip-stone is carried. The lower window also consists of four lights with cinquefoil heads, under a four-centred arch, the spandrils between being filled in with tracery. This window has no label of the ordinary kind, but is surmounted by a stone canopy of a peculiar design, and slender shafts, with caps and bases, are used in place of the principal mullions. Each window has a moulded sill, which projects from the face of the wall. The mouldings of the archway below are particularly good of their
kind, and the attached columns which decorate the jamb on either side are well-proportioned. Their capitals are, however, without foliage, nor is there any carving in the usual sense of the word, throughout the whole design. It is almost impossible to cite any instance of Pointed architecture of
this date in which groining, where introduced, is not altogether a sham, or set out on a wrong principle. In this case the vault under the |
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Eighteenth Century Gothic. 57
passage is executed in plaster, and on such a plan as to make it at once
apparent that no constructive element is involved in the design. From each corner of the vault springs a quadrant of fan tracery. The rest is simply a flat roof, panelled after a manner which might represent the 'plan of a groined vault, but which itself is, in reality, nothing more than a ceiling. In addition to this example, which may be classed under the head of
public works, a great many mansions for the nobility and landed gentry of this country were either restored or rebuilt some years later, in a style which humbly imitated, if it could not rival, the art of former days. Among these may be mentioned Belhus, the seat of Lord Dacre, in Essex, which was remodelled towards the latter half of the last century. Lord Dacre was an accomplished amateur in architecture, and a learned antiquarian. His researches had been of a kind which well qualified him for the task, and his appreciation of Mediaeval art was, for the age in which he lived, very considerable. Adlestrop Park, in Gloucester, the property of Lord Leigh, was the
field of another Gothic restoration. The old house dated from a good period, and care was taken in the alterations to preserve its original character. Llanerchydol, in Montgomeryshire, a stone mansion in the ( castellated' style (as it was then called), appears to have been built in 1776, and is by no means a bad example of the school. Beeston Hall, Norfolk, which was built in 1786. for Mr. Jacob
Preston, is another specimen of the Revival. It presents, or rather presented at the time of its erection, a simple elevation, two storeys in height. At each angle of the facade are slender octagonal turrets, terminating in pinnacles, ornamented in the usual way with crockets and finials. The three divisions into which the front is divided are surmounted by battlements, with blank shields introduced on the merlons, above which rises a somewhat high-pitched roof with clustered chimneys. Canopied niches occur on either side of a large central window in the upper storey. |
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58 Costessy Hall: Norfolk.
Costessy, or Cossey Hall, the seat of Lord Stafford, in the same
county, may be said to have presented in its earlier state and sub- sequent improvement, two distinct and interesting links in the history before us. The original building was erected in 1564, and the purity of its general conception is a pleasing evidence of the respect which still obtained for the old style. But the chapel, which was designed by Mr. Edward Jerningham,* in the last century, is equally remarkable as one of the best and earliest designs in modern Gothic. The Mediaeval spirit almost seems to have been an heirloom with the owners, or at least to have been part and parcel of the estate. The last rays of a declining art illumined the founders, and the earliest dawn of the Revival enlightened the restorers of Cossey Hall. In Scotland the old baronial type of residence was long preserved, and
it would not be difficult to cite instances of its adoption in successive ages from feudal days down to our own time. For present purposes, however, it will be sufficient to mention one which belongs to the period now reached by our history. Inverary Castle, near Loch Fyne, was begun by Archibald, Duke of Argyle, in 1745, and completed a few years afterwards. It is a large square building, flanked at each angle by a round tower, the centre block rising to a height sufficient to give light from above to a large hall. Pointed windows occur in the principal facade and in the towers at each angle. The main body of the building is two floors in height, but the towers are carried up a storey higher. The parapet wall is battlemented throughout. On the western side is the chief entrance leading into the grand hall, which is hung round with old Highland weapons and armour. This hall corresponds in design with the general character of the building, but the rest of the interior is modern. * This gentleman, an amateur of great taste, was a younger brother of Sir George
Jerningham, the owner of the mansion. He also supplied the designs and superintended the restoration of Stafford Castle, which had been demolished by order of Cromwell to within fifteen feet of the basement. |
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The Revival in Scotland. 59
It is easy to conceive that in a country like Scotland, where the
tales and traditions of Border chivalry still lingered, and which had hardly yet succumbed 10 the modernising influences induced by a union with this nation, there should have existed a romantic but genuine love for an architecture so intimately associated with its early and martial history. But in England the case was different. Events had occurred which tended to dissipate that species of nationality which finds an echo in national art. The character of our literature, our intercourse with France, and the vulgar superstition which then and long afterwards identified the Pointed arch with the tenets of Rome, had all helped to efface anything like a popular feeling in favour of Gothic. Where it existed with individuals it generally assumed the form of a false and eccentric sentiment based on a cockney notion of old ecclesiastical life, but which had no more in common with real monastic seclusion than Byron's affected misan- thropy had with the doctrines of Apemantus. The novels of WaJpole and the pseudo-Mediaeval whims which he cherished did much to encourage this feeling in the clique to which he belonged. Among those who imbibed it earliest was Thomas Barrett, a gentleman who had been elected as the representative of Dover in 1773, but who retired into private life on the dissolution of Parliament which followed soon afterwards, and devoted himself to rural pursuits at his country house in Kent. There Lord Orford, his friend and correspondent, visited him, and no doubt found some pleasure in examining and criticising the queer old mansion of his host, which, originally built in the time of James I., had since undergone numerous alterations. One room especially struck his lordship's fancy. He compared it to an abbot's study, and Mr. Barrett, who had long thought of remodelling the house, caught at the notion, Gothicised his dwelling in 1782, and, though it neither was nor ever had been connected with any conventual establishment, insisted on calling it { Lee Priory.' The elder Wyatt, then a young man rising into notice, was the architect employed in the |
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6o Lee Priory: Milton Abbas.
design, which has been reckoned among the most successful efforts of
his youth. The principal entrance front of the c Priory' is on the north side,
where the centre is occupied by a square embattled tower with pinnacles at the angles. At the extremities of this front are octagonal turrets. The chief feature of the west front is a large mullioned window, above which rises the large eight-sided tower containing the library. It is surmounted by a parapet of stone designed in tracery and probably copied from some old example. It terminates in a well-proportioned spire, conspicuous in the more distant views above the mass of foliage by which the house is surrounded. The south elevation is flanked by a square tower. Although the greater part of the building is only two storeys in height, its outline is sufficiently varied to redeem it to some extent from the cold formality which characterises this period of the Revival. Of a still earlier date (1771) was Milton Abbas, in Dorsetshire,
built for the Earl of Dorchester by Sir William Chambers, on the site of an old abbey house, of which the refectory was allowed to remain and became incorporated in the new design. The latter presents a symmetrical facade. The central block, which contains the principal entrance, is a three-storeyed building, ornamented at each angle by an octagonal turret and cupola. Right and left of this block are minor buildings two floors high, connecting it with side wings which again rise to a height of three storeys and project some feet beyond the rest. Arundel Castle, Sussex, the seat of the Duke of Norfolk, was in
a ruinous condition, until it was crestored' by his Grace in 1771. The Gothic element is certainly present in this structure, but it is of that kind which we are more accustomed to associate with the scenes of a theatre than with the masonry of the Middle Ages. The most important elevation contains the anomaly of a Norman doorway sur- rounded by perpendicular windows. Ashburnham Place, in Sussex, is another building of the same class,
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Eighteenth Century Gothic. 61
and of no higher pretensions to art. The chief facade is divided into
compartments by octagonal solid turrets, which occupy the place of buttresses. It is crowned by a heavily-machicolated cornice. The windows are square-headed, and labelled with a Tudor drip-stone. A carriage-porch in the centre presents a lofty archway (without impost) on three sides. It was designed by George Dance. In Swinton Park, Yorkshire, stood an old mansion, which, towards
the end of the last century, was enlarged and improved (?) by James Wyatt, architect. He built the drawing-room, assisted by Mr. John Foss, of Richmond, and made other additions to the house, in what was then called the castellated style. Early in this century, Mr. Danby, who then resided there, built a massive, tower-like wing at the east end of the same residence, from the designs of Robert Lugar. Instances of the application of Gothic in church restoration, between
1700 and 1800, are by no means rare, but inasmuch as they were for the most part mere reproductions of old work, due rather to a respect for the integrity of the building than to a love of the style, it is hardly worth while to quote them here. The central tower of Beverley Minster may, however, be mentioned
as a meagre specimen of Perpendicular work, which dates from this period. In Manchester, the Church of St. Mary and Salford Chapel have Gothic belfry-storeys in their towers—the rest of the buildings in each case being Italian, and about the time of Queen Anne. A chapel in Windsor Park—Mediaeval at least in motive—was designed early in the" reign of George III. The close of the last century was remarkable for the erection of a
building which, for its size, eccentricity of character, and bold adapta- tion of Gothic form, is unequalled in importance by any which had preceded it, and indeed caused no small sensation among the critics and general public of the day. The fashion which once prevailed of in- vesting, either by name or other means, any modern residence which happened to include a pointed arch in its composition with something |
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62 William Beckford.
of an ecclesiastical character has been already mentioned. In no case
was this foible more conspicuous than in the once celebrated Fonthill Abbey. The history of this strange place presents so many features for con-
sideration, and is so inseparably associated with that of its still more extraordinary owner, that they form together a subject which calls for special comment. William Beckford, son of the famous alderman of that name,
and author of c Vathek,' a wild Oriental romance which has been long forgotten, was born at Fonthill-Giffard, near Salisbury, on September 29, 1759. His father had acquired great wealth in the West Indies, and was celebrated for his munificence, both in the office of Lord Mayor (to which he was twice elected, in the years 1763 and 1770) and as an encourager of the fine arts. When the young heir came of age, he succeeded to a fortune of a million of money, and an income of 100,000/. a year. An early predilection for the study of heraldry, and the opportunities which he enjoyed of foreign travel, no doubt combined to form in him a taste for Gothic architecture, which in later life he gratified by raising for himself, in that style, one of the most remarkable mansions of the day. He had previously made himself notorious by encircling the greater
portion of his estate at Fonthill with a wall twelve feet high, and pro- tected by a chevaux de frise. It was about seven miles in length, and was finished by the contractor in little more than a year. It was built to prevent the intrusion of sportsmen on the planted and arable portion of the grounds, Mr. Beckford having a great dislike to the pursuits of hunting and shooting. The erection of this wall had the effect of cutting off the general public from any chance of inspecting the new residence which, in accordance with the whim of its owner, was called Fonthill Abbey, and which, in fact, assumed to a great extent the appearance of an ecclesiastical building. It was cruciform in plan, its length from north to south being 312 feet, while the transverse portion |
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Font hill Abbey. 63
extended to 250 feet, from east to west. The principal feature was an
octagonal tower, which rose from the centre to a height of 278 feet. To give an idea of the mystery which attended its construction, we may mention that in a number of the f Gentleman's Magazine ' it was seriously announced that the lantern at the top would command a view of the surrounding country to an extent of eighty miles, and that, notwithstanding the enormous height of the tower, a coach and six might be driven with convenience from the base to the summit, and down again. During the progress of the works, which were conducted from the
designs and under the superintendence of James Wyatt, architect, this tower accidentally caught fire, and Beckford, who possessed, or perhaps affected, through life, a philosophical indifference to misfortune of all kinds, is said to have enjoyed from his garden the magnificent spectacle of its conflagration. The erection of Fonthill Abbey was begun in 1796, and extended over a period of many years. During part of this time the number of artificers engaged on it, in various capacities, was extraordinary. On one occasion all the available labour of the neighbourhood was monopolised for it, and even the agricultural industry in the district was sensibly affected. On another, the royal works at St. George's Chapel, Windsor, stood still for the same reason. No less than 460 men were then employed on the building. They worked night and day, relieving each other in gangs. The expenses thus entailed must have been enormous. Beckford himself stated that the entire cost of Fonthill Abbey was over 273,000/. The former family seat, inhabited by Alderman Beckford, was an Italian structure. After the completion of the f Abbey' it was pulled down, and the building materials alone sold for 10,000/. South of the central abbey tower was a wing, then known as St.
Michael's Gallery. On the west side was a covered cloister, which connected the hall with a block of buildings at the end of the south wing, buttressed and flanked by two octagonal turrets. Between this |
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64 Font hill Abbey.
cloister and the south wing of the Abbey was a cortile, in the centre of
which a fountain played. The east wing was carried up rather higher than the rest, and included in its design two turrets, copied from those in the entrance gateway of St. Augustine's Monastery, at Canterbury, and features of the same kind, but of a smaller size, were repeated at the end nearest the central block. The south side of this wing was lighted by three large pointed windows, filled with tracery. The principal entrance was on the west side, and consisted of a lofty
doorway, thirty-one feet high. It was spanned by a richly moulded pointed arch, the drip-stone of which bore crockets and terminated its ogival curve in a finial. In the wall above was a small window, and above this the gable was decorated at its apex by a niche containing a statue of St. Anthony of Padua. The oratory was richly ornamented throughout. The ceiling was of
oak, gilded and divided into pendental compartments. To ensure a dim and mellow light, the windows of this room were inserted in a hollow or double wall, of which the outer fenestration was not immediately opposite the inner openings. The latter were filled with stained glass. The hall, one of the chief internal features of the Abbey, was of
important dimensions, being sixty-eight by twenty-eight feet on plan, and seventy-eight feet high. Thence, under a lofty arch, the grand staircase led to the floor of the saloon above. This central apartment, which formed what we may call the first floor of the octagonal tower, was connected with the several wings of the building by four lobbies. In the space between them were deep recesses about fifty feet high and lighted by windows which had been copied from some in the Royal Monastery at Batalha; over the apex of the arches thus used was a gallery which ran round the tower. Attached columns were corbelled out in the spandrels, and from these sprang the groining which carried the lantern above. Both the east postern tower and that at the south- east were strengthened with buttresses, and their parapets, in common with those throughout the building, were battlemented. |
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Sale of Fonthill Abbey. 6$
A staircase which led to the gallery and upper portion of the tower
was entered through a lobby on the left of the western vestibule. The dining-room and library were both elegantly fitted up with oak. Indeed, the arrangements of the interior, though far from, compatible with comfort (owing to the nature of the plan and a constant sacrifice to external effect), were of a most costly and magnificent character. Pictures, objects of art and virtu, and every luxury which wealth could command were assembled there in profusion. Some idea of their value may be formed when we state that in 1819, at the sale of the Abbey and its contents to Mr. Farquhar, 7,2.00 catalogues at a guinea each were sold in a few days. It was only when the building had passed out of Beckford's hands
that he became fully aware of its instability and how shamefully Wyatt (who, by the way, died before its completion) had been deceived by those to whom the construction of the Abbey had been entrusted. A few years after the sale, Mr. Beckford was summoned to the death- bed of a man who had been clerk of works at Fonthill. He confessed that, though a large sum of money had been paid for sound founda- tions under the central tower, the inverted arches described in the spe- cification had never been provided. The whole fabric, or at least this portion of it, might fall down at any time. The only wonder was how it had kept so long together. Beckford lost no time in communicating with Mr. Farquhar on the subject; but that gentleman remarked with coolness that he had no doubt it would last his lifetime. He was, however, mistaken. Not long afterwards the tower fell in a heap of ruins. Fonthill Abbey has since undergone various repairs and altera- tions. A new mansion has been erected near its site ; but little or no vestige remains of that strange ambitious building which was once the wonder of the western counties, and which formed so important a feature in the Gothic Revival. We have already seen how materially literature and the labours of
the antiquary helped to sustain the traditions of Mediaeval art. Let us . f
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66 Literature of the Revival.
now take a rapid survey of those books which were published during
the eighteenth century in connection with this subject. So early as 1683 Lord Clarendon had begun his f History and
Antiquities of Winchester Cathedral.' The work was continued by Mr. Samuel Gale, who in 1715 published the result of their joint labours. The volume contained a full description of the tombs and monuments in the church, together with an account of all its bishops, deans, and prebendaries, to which was added the history and antiquities of Hyde Abbey. A later edition appeared in 1723. Thomas Pownall, Fellow of the Royal Society and of the Society of
Antiquaries, a gentleman of considerable learning and political know- ledge, was born at Lincoln in 1722, and died in 1805. He wrote on the c Origin of Gothic Architecture.' The treatise is little known, and there is no copy of it in the British Museum. In 1722-3 two additional volumes to Dugdale's c Monasticon ' were
added by Mr. John Stevens. In 1762 appeared Perry's c Series of English Medals,' in which the
author attempted to illustrate and classify Gothic tracery from the Conquest downwards. The descriptive text was written by Mr. John Aubrey. A more important work was published in 1771 by James Bentham,
M.A., Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries and rector of Feltwell St. Nicholas, Norfolk. It was entitled f The History and Antiquities of the Conventual Church of Ely, from the Foundation of the Monastery, a.d. 673, to the year 1771.' It was printed at the Cambridge University Press, and was illustrated with engravings on copper of interior views, plans, monuments, &c, by P. S. Lamborn from the drawings of Mr. Heins. Some of the architectural examples are selected with little discrimination, but they are, on the whole, very finely etched. c The Carpenter's Treasure, a collection of designs for temples, with
their plans, gates, doors, rails, &c, in the Gothic taste,' is a curious |
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Grose's 'Antiquities of England! 67
little book by one Wallis, which made its appearance in 1774, and may
perhaps be still met with at old bookstalls. Grose's ( Antiquities of England and Wales'—one of the most
comprehensive works of the kind which had appeared since Dugdale's c Monasticon'—was published in four folio volumes, to which were afterwards added two supplementary volumes, between the years 1773 and 1787. It is amply illustrated with careful engravings. In a lengthy preface the author gives a useful essay on Gothic Architecture, including a general history of ancient British castles, explaining the terms relative to the construction of their garrisons, and the old machines used for attack and defence. To this information is added a useful account of British monastic institutions, compiled from the (then) best existing authorities, including Domesday Book, which is frequently quoted. The architectural drawings which accompany this work vary in merit. Ornamental sculpture, when given in detail, is feebly drawn, but the general views are useful, and doubly interesting . when we remember that many of the buildings which they illustrate have since perished. Fonts, brasses, and other objects of ecclesiastical service are represented, and the second volume of the supplement includes some etchings and descriptive text of Druidical remains in the Channel Islands. In treating the English and Welsh antiquities, each county is separately considered and accompanied by a small map, with a list of the places most worthy of notice. Mr. Grose was assisted in this work by various antiquarians, clergymen, and artists of his time. He makes especial mention of Mr. Gough, Thomas Sandly, then professor of architecture to the Royal Academy, and several noble- men and gentlemen who furnished descriptions or histories of their seats. In 1789 the same author produced his 'Antiquities of Scotland' in
two folio volumes, a useful work of its kind, prefaced by an introduc- tion, in which the history and leading characteristics of Mediaeval Scotland are described. The engravings, most of which were executed |
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68 Carter's Works.
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by a Mr. Sparrow, are inferior to those of the England and Wales
series. In 1795 Mr. Grose undertook the same sort of work for Ireland,
on this occasion in two quarto volumes—also prefaced by a description of Irish architecture. It is remarkable that, in almost all illustrations of sculptured ornament which were produced at this time, there is one unvaried and conventional treatment noticeable. If a knot of foliage or a carved head is to be represented on a cornice or in a capital, It is drawn in outline or with the faintest indication of half-tone, while the ground on which it is supposed to be relieved is shaded flat, without any attempt to show cast shadows. The result of this is an extra- ordinary meanness of effect, much at variance with the bold and artistic manner in which general views were often treated by the same draughtsman. This fault was to some extent avoided by Mr. Carter, an architect,
who in 1786 published his f Specimens of ancient Sculpture and Painting,' which he dedicated to Horace Walpole. It contained numerous illustrations and letter-press descriptive of monuments, brasses, encaustic tiles, wall-painting, and mural sculpture, &c, and was a most valuable contribution to the art literature of his time. In 1795 the same gentleman brought out his f Ancient Architecture of England.' It was divided into two parts, the first being entitled ( The Orders* of Architecture during the British, Roman, Saxon, and Norman eras.' The second part was called f The Orders of Archi- tecture during the reigns of Henry III., Edward III., Richard II., Henry ^W^ and Henry VIII.' The engravings in this book, though somewhat coarse, are boldly and skilfully executed, the author's pro- fessional skill, no doubt, enabling him to render the illustrations of a more useful and practical kind than many which had preceded them ; * It was long before the use of this foolish word was abandoned. It had been
unsatisfactory in its application to Greek and Roman art, but it became ridiculous in connection with Mediaeval architecture. |
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Hearne s 'Antiquities of Great Britain! 69
details were now given, with plans and sections of mouldings, and the
examples were selected with taste and judgment. In the delineation of carved foliage, the spirit of ancient art was still misinterpreted, and many of the early English capitals in Carter's book remind one more of the Renaissance school than of the period to which they belong. But, taken as a whole, the work was a decided advance on what had hitherto appeared. It was dedicated to the Duke of York, who had been a patron of Carter, and had employed him to carry out some designs at Oatlands in accordance with the style which, it appears, His Royal Highness, as well as our author, affected, Hearne's c Antiquities of Great Britain,' illustrated by views of
monasteries, castles, and churches, many of which were then existing in a ruined state, was printed by James Phillips, in George Yard, Lom- bard Street, and published jointly by T. Hearne and W. Byrne, the former of whom drew and the latter engraved the illustrations, in 1786. The architectural views, like many others of the same class and date, were executed with reference rather to general and picturesque effect, than to any accuracy of detail. Short descriptions, written in French and English, accompany each plate in the volume, which is of an oblong quarto size. In the same year (1786) Gough published his l Sepulchral Monu-
ments of Great Britain,' a large and important work of five folio volumes, which gave not only excellent illustrations of tombs, mural monuments, brasses, costumes, armour, &c, of the Middle Ages, but descriptive text of great value to the antiquary. Although the merits of Pointed architecture were now becoming
gradually acknowledged, its decorative features had still been little studied. The publication, therefore, of a work devoted almost ex- clusively to the illustration of Mediaeval sculpture was an event of some importance. In 1795 Mr. Joseph Halfpenny brought out a book of this description entitled c Gothic Ornaments In the Cathedral Church of York.' The illustrations were drawn and etched by |
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7<d Bentham and Willis,
himself. They are exceedingly careful and delicate in execution, but
wanting in spirit, and, in fact, are far too smooth and neat to be characteristic of ancient art. The carved work is coldly drawn, and wherever two sides of a capital are identical in motive, the foliage is reproduced line by line at each corner without the slightest deviation of curve. The result is of course an absence of vitality for which no refinement can atone. Again, the leaves themselves are frequently bounded by a hard outline or mass of shadow gradated evenly from their edges to the ground behind. This gave them a sharp metallic appearance which is absolutely false in effect. But the most curious and inexcusable fault of all was the manner in which the sculpture of human features was delineated. Almost all the grotesque heads in Halfpenny's engravings are leering at each other with fupilled eyes. Such representations fail to convey the notion of sculpture altogether, and become vulgar caricatures. This foolish conceit has, happily, long been abandoned. In 1798 James Bentham and Brown Willis published a 'History of
Gothic and Saxon Architecture in England, exemplified by descriptions of the Cathedrals, &c.' It appeared in a thin folio volume, containing large engravings of perspective exteriors, not devoid of grace, but wanting in appreciation of detail. In this treatise Bentham defends Mediaeval architecture from the stigma of c barbarism' with which modern ignorance had associated it. He was, however, but a cautious champion of the style, and evidently laboured under the impression, which has been entertained even in our own day, that King's College Chapel represented the culminating glory of the Middle Ages. Indeed, it seems to be only within the last decade of years that we
have learned to reverse that theory, and to admire the period of Mediaeval art which was distinguished, not for the cunning intricacy of its ornament, but for graceful simplicity of design and for sound prin- ciples of construction. It would be ungrateful, however, to ignore the services rendered to
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The Gothic Revival. 71
the cause of the Gothic Revival by many an antiquary and many an
author of the last century, because their opinions and their books fail to suggest or illustrate those principles of taste which have since been enlightened by later research and more practised skill. It was something, at least, to draw attention to the noble works of
our ancestors, which had long been neglected and despised: to record with the pencil or the pen some testimony, however inadequate, of their goodly forms and worthy purpose: to invest with artistic and historical interest the perishing monuments of an age when art was pure and genuine. And if, at the present day, we flatter ourselves that the buildings
which we raise have at length realised the spirit of old English architec- ture, and reproduced its most essential merits, let us remember that these works have been aided by the past, and will be judged by a future generation, and as the former strove to teach, the latter will not fail to criticise. |
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72 Difficulties of Classification.
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CHAPTER V.
"N reviewing the various phases through which the fine arts
have passed from their earliest development down to the present time, it has long been the custom to indicate such phases chronologically by the names of successive centuries. This has been especially the case with English architecture of the Middle Ages, because it would be hardly possible by any different system to distin- guish schools which followed, or rather grew out of, each other so gradually and imperceptibly, and in which the change from style to style must be attributed to the inevitable progression of national taste rather than to that influence of individual skill or genius which marks the history of pictorial art. It is, however, but an approximately correct method of classification,
and if imperfect as an index to the varieties of ancient architecture, will be found doubly so in dealing with the works of modern days. The present age, from numerous causes upon which it is not now necessary to dilate, presents a greater diversity of opinion on matters aesthetical than probably ever before existed in one country at the same time. Yet in this nineteenth century, 01 rather that portion of it included within the last thirty years, the glimmering sparks of enthusiasm for Mediaeval art first quickened into a flame, which though it is still exposed to the fitful gusts of private bias and public caprice, promises one day to burn long and steadily. It would, of course, be impossible to give anything like a detailed
description of even the prominent examples of the Revival during that period. As they increase in number they necessarily diminish in, at least, historical interest, and it will therefore be desirable that the more |
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The Works of Nash. 73
modern section of this history should be devoted to the characteristics
of each architect, as typified in his most important works, rather than to the endless task of describing every building which in this generation, by pinnacle or pointed arch, puts in an appearance as Gothic. The instances, however, of that style which belong to what we may
be allowed to call the pr<e-Puginesque era are entitled to our respect as resulting from a spirit that stemmed the current of. popular prejudice before the genius and ingenuity of later minds had been brought to bear on the subject, or the maturer study of ancient models had taught experience in design. Among the architects who at the dawn of the present century con-
tributed by their works to the Revival were Wyatt and Nash. The former has been already mentioned in connection with Fonthill Abbey, which he did not live to see completed. He was employed on many other large works in Wiltshire, including the restoration of Salisbury Cathedral. Nash's alterations and additions to Windsor Castle—especially the
Waterloo Gallery, though far from embodying the spirit of the ancient structure—were nevertheless good of their kind. His country houses, especially in Ireland, were chiefly of the pseudo-baronial sort, which, for want of better definition, received the general name of c castellated.' Among them the mansions of Lord Lorton and Lord Gort may be mentioned. Ravensworth Castle, at Gateshead, is another example of his skill, Luscombe, near Dawlish in Devonshire, was begun for Mr. Charles Hbare, from designs by Nash, in 1800, and finished in 1804. The south or garden front * consists of a large octagonal tower in the centre, united by three of its sides to the main building, which extends east and west of it. At the east end is a cloister of Tudor arches with an embattled parapet, The piers of each bay are strengthened by * In this and other cases it must be remembered that the description given is of the
original design. Many houses of this date have, of course, since undergone alteration, and some have been pulled down. |
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74 The Works of Wyatt.
buttresses which terminate in pinnacles above. On the west side is a
porch of the same character, with a mullioned window deeply recessed. The first floor of the tower is lighted by two large pointed windows filled with stained glass. The dining-room is at the east end. The west is occupied by offices, and on the north is a square tower, the lower part of which forms an opened porch, with a pointed arch on three sides. The whole is a bold and vigorous composition. Belvoir Castle, in Leicestershire, is an old building which was entirely
remodelled in the early part of this century by the Duke of Rutland, under the direction of James Wyatt, at an expense of, at least, 200,000/. Its principal feature is a circular tower, four storeys in height, crowned by a machicolated parapet. The windows of this tower are flat-pointed, or nearly round-headed. They are divided into two lights, each head being filled with tracery. The rest of the building presents a straggling but not unpicturesque assemblage of features, including two octagonal turrets with pinnacles at each angle, and three square towers of various dimensions, also machicolated. Some of the windows here and there are pointed, but as a rule they have square heads with Tudor labels— a species of decoration which once passed for good Gothic. The lower part of the principal tower forms a colonnade from which stone brackets project to carry a verandah above. The buttresses used here, and throughout Wyatt's work, are generally of a thin and wiry description. They are, for the most part, divided, whatever their height may be, into two pretty equal portions by one set-off". On October 26, 1816, while the works were in progress, a most calamitous fire broke out, which destroyed a considerable portion of this building. Among the rest, a valuable picture gallery was consumed, and many paintings of Sir Joshua Reynolds, including the celebrated f Nativity,' perished in the flames. During the works recently carried out at Combe Abbey, the Earl of
Craven's seat, an old room was taken down which had long been sup- posed to belong to the Elizabethan age. Before its demolition, how- ever, certain facts were brought to light with regard to constructive |
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Country Mansions. 75
detail which leave little doubt that it was erected at a much later
period. The ceiling had been decorated with papier-mache orna- ment, and the panel lining of the wall proved, on examination, to be composed of deal strips glued in their places, instead of being worked in solid wood. A. transomed window by which the room had been lighted was executed in cast iron. The fireplace alone was genuine old work. It had evidently been refixed when the room was 1 remodelled,' which is supposed to have happened in 1803. The foundation-stone of Lord Bridgewater's seat, Ashridge, in
Buckinghamshire, was laid in 1808. It was a large and important mansion of a Mediaeval character, built on the site of an old edifice, of which portions were allowed to remain and become incorporated in the new work which was carried out by Wyatt. The style is Tudor. Its principal facade is decorated with turrets, and with a porch which reminds us of the c Lords' entrance' in the present Houses of Parlia- ment. The design exhibits no obtrusive faults, but is remarkable for great coldness of treatment. Elvaston Hall, near Derby, was an old mansion belonging to Lord
Harrington, but the principal portion was rebuilt early in this century by Mr. Walker, an architect who, however, only carried out Wyatt's plans. It contains the usual complement of turrets and battlements, but has also a very fair oriel window. Nash built Garnstone House .in Herefordshire, and a house for Colonel Scudamore, at Kentchurch Park, both of which may be considered examples of the Revival. Childwall Hall, Lancashire, was another of his efforts in the same direc- tion. It is a two-storeyed building, flanked by square and octagonal towers, and heavily machicolated. His designs for Magdalen College, Oxford, were much admired at the time—they were, however, never executed. In his own residence, East Cowes Castle, he had an opportunity of indulging a taste which was more distinguished for its appreciation of Gothic than that which characterised most of his contemporaries. Donnington Hall, in Leicestershire, the property of Lord Hastings,
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76 Hawarden Castle: Ditton Park, &c.
was erected between 1790 and 1800, by Mr. W. Wilkins, architect.
In composition it presents a rectangular mass, with a porch, tower, and turrets. Coleorton Hall, in the same county, once the country seat of the generous art patron, Sir George Beaumont, was one of the few attempts in the way of Pointed architecture which were made by G. Dance.* Stanley Hall, in Shropshire, was built early in the present century by Mr. Smalman, an architect of Quatford, near Bridgnorth, and is not a bad specimen of provincial work. Armitage Park, about six miles from Lichfield, in Staffordshire, and Rindlesham Hall, near Woodbridge, Suffolk, are interesting as early specimens of nineteenth- century Gothic. Hawarden Castle was built by Sir John Glynne in 1752. There had
formerly existed on the same spot an old mansion of wood and plaster belonging to the Ravenscroft family, called Broadlane House. The new residence was an unpretending but substantially constructed house, which retained its original name until 1809, when Sir Stephen Glynne, assisted by the professional advice of Mr. Thomas Cundy, caused the brick exterior to be cased with stone in the f castellated' style. Lord Montagu's seat at Ditton Park, Somersetshire, was designed by
Mr. Atkinson, architect, about 1811. It is in part a three-storeyed building, while the rest consists of only two floors. In general plan it is nearly quadrangular. The central feature is a square tower, to which a turret is added at one corner. The windows are square-headed and protected by an ordinary Tudor drip-stone. About the same time Lord De la Warr's old country mansion, Bourn House in Cambridge- shire, was restored by Mr. John Adey Repton, who introduced new features, such as bay-windows, chimney-shafts, &c. Cobham Hall, Kent, then the residence of Lord Darnley, was another old building on which the elder Repton and his two sons, besides Wyatt, were employed at various times for additions and restoration. * A new storey was added to this building (Coleorton Hall) in 1862, from the designs
of Mr. F. P. Cockerel!. |
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Eaton Hall, 77
One of the most important attempts at Pointed architecture of this
date is Eaton Hall, Cheshire, the seat of the Marquis of Westminster. In design it is a mixture of Early and Late Gothic. It was built on the site of an old mansion, erected by Sir Thomas Grosvenor in the reign of King William. The later structure was designed by Mr. Porden, an architect whose name has been long forgotten, but who, no doubt, had considerable practice in his day. It was probably finished quite early in this century, for a full account of it is given in the ' Monthly Magazine' for September 1814. The south-east view presents a large quadrangular block of buildings
irregularly divided into bays by buttresses and turrets. It is three storeys in height, with a battlemented parapet running round the main walls. The windows were filled with tracery, but the latter was executed in cast iron, moulded on both sides, and grooved to receive the glass. The walls, balustrades, battlements, and pinnacles, are of a light-coloured stone. The principal entrance to the house is in the middle of the west front, under a vaulted portico, which admits a carriage to the steps leading to the hall, a spacious and lofty apartment occupying the height of two storeys, and roofed by a vaulted ceiling. The pavement is of coloured marble arranged in geometrical patterns. c At the end of the hall a screen of five arches supports a gallery that connects the bed-chambers on the north side of the house with those on the south. Under this gallery two open arches to the right and left conduct to the grand staircase, and opposite to the door of the hall is the entrance to the saloon.' The grand staircase itself is enriched with canopied niches, and with groining under the landings and sky- light. The second staircase was constructed of cast iron, after a design which no doubt was then considered very appropriate. The saloon forms a square on plan about thirty feet each way. Fan tracery, executed in plaster (but now removed), sprang from attached columns at the angles and sides of the room to receive the vault, which in plan was nearly octagonal. On the right and left are little vestibules |
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Eaton Hall, Cheshire {before alteration in 1870)—the Seat of the Marquis of Westminster.
W. Porden, Architect, 1803.
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78 Eaton Hall: Seldon House.
which must be passed to reach the drawing-room and dining-room.
The windows of these rooms are traceried and filled with painted glass. The dining-room at the north extremity of the east front is about fifty feet long. The ceiling was panelled, and a central pendant was con- structed to carry a chandelier. The drawing-room occupies the south extremity of the east front, and is of the same form and general dimen- sions as the dining-room, with the addition of a large window (now blocked up) which had a southern aspect.* The library is in the centre of the south front; its ceiling and large bow window being decorated in character with the other features above mentioned. It is fitted up with oak. In the principal facades, the windows are pointed, and many have ogival hood-mouldings. The middle window of the saloon opens on a vaulted cloister, occupying the space between the dining-room and drawing-room, and from the cloister a flight of steps leads to a spacious terrace. The size of this building alone would make it imposing, but the distribution of parts, as in many efforts of that day, is more suited to the outline of an Italian composition than that of a Gothic design, while the character of the details is of a pseudo-ecclesiastical kind. Indeed, here as in many other contemporary examples of the Revival, it is evident that the architect sought his inspiration in the churches father than in the domestic architecture of the Middle Ages. The noble mansions of old England had still to be studied. Seldon House, near Croydon, had for its garden front a sort of
arcade, divided into five bays, each spanned by a pointed arch with buttresses between. This arcade was flanked on either side by turrets which rose above the parapet of the building. It was completed early in this century. At the same period Lord Derby's residence at Knowsley Park was
* Since this description was written, Mr. A,. Waterhouse has been employed by the
present Marquis of Westminster to remodel the building, which will thus undergo con- siderable alteration and improvement. The internal decorations will be of an exceedingly rich and beautiful description. |
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Sir Robert Smirke.
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79
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rebuilt, £ in the style of a baronial mansion,' under the superintendence
of Mr. Foster of Liverpool, while Mrs. Bulwer Lytton adopted the now rapidly developed taste in erecting Knebworth House, in Hert- fordshire, about fifty years ago. Warleigh House, a two-storeyed building, was raised in 1814 for
Mr. Henry Skrine by Mr. Webb, a Staffordshire architect. After Wyatt and Nash perhaps Smirke may be next reckoned in
importance. Fie built Eastnor Castle, in Herefordshire, for Lord Somers. It is a massive and gloomy-looking building, flanked by watch-towers, and enclosing a keep. To preserve the character at which it aimed, the windows were made exceedingly small and narrow. This must have resulted in much inconvenience within. Indeed all the admirers of Pointed architecture fell at this time into the grievous error of supposing that its merits lay in the quaint unccuthness of early necessity rather than in those immutable but ever applicable principles which should really hold as good now as they did five hundred years ago, and accommodate themselves to every new requirement and modern invention. The building in question might have made a tolerable fort before the invention of gunpowder, but as a residence it was a picturesque mistake. Wilton Castle, in Yorkshire, was built by Smirke, on the site and
out of the ruins of an ancient edifice. Offley Place, in Hertfordshire, a Tudor mansion, also designed by him, is a large building three storeys high, having in the centre of its block a tower 20 feet square which contains the staircase, and is lighted by painted windows. The library is nearly 40 feet long. In Scotland, Gillespie was the great revivalist of his day. Lord
Macdonald's seat at Armidale, in Inverness, was built from his designs. He enlarged Wishaw, in Lanarkshire, for Lord Belhaven, and also erected Culdees Castle, once the residence of General Drummond. The latter is in the oft-quoted c castellated' style and includes in its compo- sition a square tower, which, like the one at OfBey Place, is used for a |
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8o John Britton.
hall and staircase. It has a large pointed window on one side enriched
with tracery. Crichton was another Scotch architect of some note. He prepared
plans for Abercairny Abbey, in Perthshire, which his successors, Messrs. Dickson, of Edinburgh, afterwards carried out. In Ireland, the reintroduction of Pointed architecture was mainly due
to the skill and ingenuity of the Messrs. Morrison (Richard and William), two architects who lived at Walcot, near Bray, and were extensively employed in works of a Mediaeval character. They restored Kilcuddy Hall, and executed facades of Shelton Abbey for Lord Wicklow. They also built Ballyleigh Castle, Kerry, the seat of Colonel James Crosbie, M.P. The latter was a very creditable performance, and the beauty of the scenery by which it is surrounded contributed no little to its effect. Having briefly examined some of the chief examples of Pointed
architecture which were designed in the early part of this century, under the patronage or direction of those from whom the Revival received especial encouragement, let us now turn to another source of impulse which helped the same cause, viz., the archaeological literature of the day. In the consideration of this subject, one name stands pre- eminently forward, the name of an extraordinarily prolific writer, who, if he did not possess a high order of genius, was distinguished for his indomitable industry, and for the zeal which enabled him, year after year, to contribute to the press the results of his research during a period which extended far beyond the limits of ordinary authorship—a name which, in the history of art, connects at least four generations, for it belonged to one who was a young man when Sir Joshua Reynolds still wielded his brush, but who lived to see Eastlake president of the Royal Academy. John Britton was born at Kingtown, near Sodbury, in 1771, and
died in London exactly fourteen years ago. In addition to a list of nearly seventy works, of more or less importance, whose titles may be |
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Britton's Early Life. 81
read in the British Museum catalogue, he has left behind him an auto-
biography, which he did not live to complete, but which was published after his death. What length that memoir would have assumed, in a finished state, may be inferred from a perusal of its present contents. It is impossible to read the first few pages without corning to a conclu- sion that the author had kept a diary since he had learned to write, and intended to publish the whole of it up to the time of his death. Indeed, though this intention, if it ever existed, was never carried out, a more diffuse and erratic narrative never issued from the press. Amidst his numerous good qualities, it cannot be denied that the author had one failing—vanity, and to this fact we may attribute the unnecessary care with which he chronicles the details of his early life. He begins with a description of his native village, which alone occupies some pages— gives us the character of his father, the caprices of his uncle—relates how he fell out of a bedroom window, and was raked out of the squire's fishpond—tells us what he drew on his slate at school, and what became of all his schoolfellows—gravely reports that he once made a large snowball, which rolled down hill and made a breach in some garden wall. The most trivial and unimportant incidents, in short, which help to vary the monotony of schoolboy life, he records with something like schoolboy pride ; but these may be at once passed over. On October 25, 1785, he set out with his uncle for London, where young Britton was at length apprenticed to Mr. Mendham, a wine merchant, by whom he was initiated into the mysteries of the trade. His time was chiefly employed in bottling and corking, an occupation which he soon began to feel was beneath his abilities, and which led him to regard even the occasional visits of excisemen as a pleasant relief. The house of business where he laboured in this humble capacity was known as the Jerusalem Chambers, Clerkenwell. He appears to have been in the habit of rising early, and taking walks into the suburbs before the hours of work. In one of these excursions, he fell in with a man named Essex, who painted figures on watch faces, and having G
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82 Early Literary Efforts.
struck up an acquaintance with him, was introduced to Brayley, who
at that time was also an enamel painter, but who afterwards became asso- ciated with Britton in the publication of several topographical works. They composed and published between them a song called c The Guinea-pig'—intended as a satire on the powder tax. It was Britton's first published work, and years afterwards he flattered himself that a time might come when it would be regarded with curiosity. In the course of time a love adventure with Mrs. Mendham's lady's
maid caused him to run away from his employer, and follow the object of his affections into Devonshire, where, however, he became disen- chanted, and after vainly endeavouring to get employment at Bath, he returned to town on foot. Here fortune so far smiled on him as to permit his filling the post of cellarman at the London Tavern, and he afterwards obtained a similar situation with a hop-merchant's widow, who allowed him 40/. a year and his breakfast. About this time his ambition led him to frequent the third-rate debating societies and spouting clubs with which the metropolis then abounded, and this helped him to form new acquaintances, by whose assistance he at length became engaged as a -lawyer's clerk to Mr. Simpson, an attorney, at a salary of fifteen shillings a week. On the death of his master, he entered the service of Messrs. Parker and Wix, solicitors, whose prac- tice was not so extensive as to prevent Britton from finding time to read—an opportunity of which he was only too ready to avail himself. In 1799 he was hired by a Mr. Chapman to write, sing, and recite
for him at a theatre in Panton Street, Haymarket, where he received three guineas a week. This led to an acquaintance with Lonsdale, manager of Sadler's Wells, at whose house he met Dibdin, Grimaldi, and the famous Egyptian traveller and antiquary, Belzoni, who, strange to say, was at that time performing as an acrobat in London theatres.* * Belzoni was six feet six inches high and proportionably muscular. He was a native
of Italy, and had received an education for the priesthood. Having saved some money, he sailed for Egypt, where he so pleased the Pasha by some mechanical invention that he obtained permission to open the pyramid of Gizeh and several tombs at Thebes. We are indebted to his zeal for many valuable relics of antiquity now in the British Museum. |
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1 The Beauties of Wiltshire! 83
Britton's first literary efforts were of the humblest description. He
was tempted by the great success of one of Sheridan's plays (translated and altered from the German of Kotzebue) to write a romance, entitled c The enterprising Adventures of Pizarro.' For this performance he received ten pounds. The most valuable of his early friends and patrons was Wheble, who induced him to begin those topographical researches of which the world first saw a result in his c Beauties of Wiltshire.' His first expedition is thus described:—■
With maps, a pocket-compass, a small camera obscura (for the more portable
and simple camera luclda was not then known), two or three portable volumes, an umbrella, and a scanty packet of body linen, &c, I commenced a walk from London, on June 20, and returned again to it on September 30. During that excursion, I visited Oxford, Woodstock, Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwick, Kenilworth, Birmingham, Hagley, c the Leasowes,' and Church Stretton. Thence I made diverging excursions to Shrewsbury, Welsh Pool, and several other places within twenty miles of my residence, and returned through Ludlow, Leominster, Hereford, Ross, down the Wye to Chepstow, to Bristol, and Bath ; thence to several parts of Wiltshire, and back to London. This long and toilsome, but eminently interesting and attractive journey, cost me only 11/. i6j. gd. I was compelled to practise economy, for my finances were low, and I knew not how or where to recruit them. My sister kindly presented me with 5/., and her good husband lent me ten more, which seemed to me a fortune. f The Beauties of Wiltshire' met with such commercial success, that
Britton, in conjunction with his friend and fellow-worker Brayley, was employed on the more extensive work which followed or rather deve- loped from it. f The Beauties of England and Wales ' formed a series of eighteen volumes, which were published between t8oo and 1816, and contained c original delineations, topographical, historical, and descrip- tive of each county.' They included about 700 engravings of mansions, views, &c. Some of the woodcuts were by Bewick, and worthy of that master; but, as a rule, the illustrations were poor, and of a kind which G 2
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84 'The Antiquities of Great Britain!
will not bear comparison with those given in Britton's later works.
Britton himself when he began his literary career knew little of archi- tecture., and thus in c The Beauties of Wiltshire,' while the tombs and painted glass in the churches which he visited are fully described, the buildings themselves inspire him only with that vague admiration which results from uneducated taste. But Britton was not a man to be easily discouraged. He soon began
to qualify himself for the pursuit which he had chosen. In 1803 he had attained sufficient skill with the pencil to produce his ' Drawings of Stonehenge,' and in 1805 he began a more important work, c The Architectural Antiquities of Great Britain,' which appeared in forty parts, and made four quarto volumes, the last bearing date 1814, and a fifth being added in 18 18. They were illustrated with nearly three hundred plates, after drawings by various artists, among whom were Turner, Cattermole, and Westall, but by far the best are those which were engraved by Le Keux from drawings by Mackenzie, and which will be easily recognised by the care and delicacy of their execution.* The work included many examples of ancient domestic, as well as
ecclesiastical English architecture. Abbeys, priories, castles, with an occasional view of a cathedral, or the details of some remarkable build- ing—such as Crosby Hall—were delineated for the first time with something like accuracy, as well as artistic power, and in many cases the ichnography of buildings—so essential to the student—was added. In 1813 Britton published a description of St. Mary Redcliffe
Church, at Bristol, to which he appended an essay on the life and writings of Chatterton, and in 1814 he began his most important work, 1 The Cathedral Antiquities of Great Britain.' The letterpress which accompanies this series bears evidence of great research on the part of its author, who spared neither time nor pains to collect material. Besides a description of the buildings themselves, which he was by this * Portions of the text in this, and some other publications by Britton, were from the
pen of Mr. E. J. Willson, F.S.A., of Lincoln. |
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Brit ton's * Cathedral Antiquities!
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85
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time fully competent to give, he adds a vast quantity of information
regarding their history and foundations, with anecdotes and brief memoirs of the principal dignitaries of the Church who were from time to time associated with them. As may be supposed, the cMonasti- con Anglicanum' is constantly quoted by him, but, in addition to this work, he consulted Sumner, Batteley, Godwin's Catalogue of English Bishops, and a host of other authorities. The original edition appeared in fourteen parts, the illustrations of
the earlier numbers being executed by Britton's old fellow-workers Mackenzie and Le Keux, who had now attained a perfection in their peculiar branch of art which had not hitherto been reached, and has since been scarcely surpassed. It is indeed to be regretted that all the plates were not entrusted to their hands. It will be no detraction from the merit of Cattermole to say that his acknowledged excellence as a water-colour artist unfitted him for the less dignified labour, but nicer accuracy, of an architectural draughtsman. He could throw an effect upon the view of a ruin with perhaps greater skill than Mackenzie, but for refinement, perspicuity, and attention to detail, especially in outline views, Mackenzie distanced every one. Perhaps the least satisfactory of the cathedral series, in regard to
illustration, is the one on Bristol, in which a great falling off is notice- able in the execution of the plates. The careful hand of Le Keux redeemed some from the charge of slovenliness, but in many those qualities are wanting which should render such works of value to the architectural student.* * The cathedral series appeared in the following order :—
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86 The 'Antiquities of Normandy!
In 1827, Pugin and Le Keux brought out their Specimens of the
Architectural Antiquities of Normandy,' for which Britton, who acted as their publisher, supplied the descriptive text. This work is in one quarto volume, and contains illustrations of the Caen churches, of Bayeux Cathedral, the Hotel de Bourgtheroulde, and Abbey of St. Amand, Rouen, with views of various churches at Caudebeck, Caen, Vancelles, and Dieppe. The original drawings were either executed by the elder Pugin himself, or prepared under his immediate superin- tendence. They were exceedingly careful, and have been admirably engraved by Le Keux. The letterpress is very useful in its way, and, as Britton takes care to tell us, was printed and published as a separate work. Meanwhile our author did not confine his labours to the produc-
tion of these volumes. His £ Fine Arts of the English School, with Biographical and Critical Descriptions, illustrated by engravings after Reynolds, Flaxman, Westall, Romney, Nollekens, Northcote, West, etc.,' appeared in 1812. In 1830 he brought out his c Picturesque Views of English Cities,' a quarto volume copiously illustrated. f A Dic- tionary of the Architecture and Archaeology of the Middle Ages' was compiled by him, and published in 1838, with illustrations by Le Keux. It will be unnecessary to mention a host of minor works, of which
he was either joint author, editor, or publisher. For the space of half a century his pen was continually active, and it may be safely said that he did more to promote the due appreciation of Mediaeval Art than any contemporary writer. His long association with architecture, and with men who adopted
its profession, prompted him more than once in his life to try his hand at design. His sketch for a monument to Chatterton, of which an illustration is given in his life, .might provoke the ridicule of our modern architects ; but the plans which he submitted in competition for the Nelson cenotaph, though by no means realising our present notions of Gothic, are far from contemptible; and, if we remember the |
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Br it ton's Autobiography. 87
time when they were prepared (1839), probably represented the average
ability of his day. It is, however, but fair to state that in the latter- work he availed himself of the services of Mr. W. Hosking, to whose care, if the design had been successful, its execution would have been committed. Neither in this case, however, nor in that of the Chatterton memorial, were Britton's suggestions adopted. The materials of his autobiography are diffuse and scattered. He
seems to have followed no regular plan in its compilation. It is wanting in chronological sequence. If he is describing a town as he saw it in 1814, he is reminded of some circumstance which occurred there when he revisited it in 1840, and forthwith the two epochs are jumbled together. In his youth he made many acquaintances, of whom he writes at full length. He saw many other people whose life and characters he finds it necessary to touch upon. Those he only heard of are still more numerous; yet, about these, too, he has something to say. Meanwhile, though he is prolix on the subject of his infancy, he gives us little or no information of his life as a man. We know, however, that his services in the cause of art became gradually and steadily appreciated. He who began his London career as a humble cellarman, lived to be feted and honoured by those who had themselves grown famous in the world.* The rapidity with which Britton wrote, the occasional inaccuracy of
his pen, and perhaps, too, the very success which he achieved, have laid him open to the charge which is often brought against men who, without aspiring to the higher departments of literature, accept author- ship as a business and means of livelihood, and cater for public enter- * The last proof-sheets of his autobiography were sent to the printer on December 2,
1856, with an intimation that Mr. Britton would rest for a day or two before he resumed his work. He was destined never to resume it. On the 4th of the same month, he was taken ill with bronchitis, a disorder to which he was subject, and from which he now felt that he should not recover. He sent for his old friend Le Keux, and gave him some last instructions about certain prints and drawings which he desired should be sold. He died at last, we are told, peacefully and with resignation. |
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88 Pugin and Willson.
tainment or information as l book-makers.' But granting that Britton
belonged to this class of writers, it may safely be urged that he did more service to the cause of the Gothic Revival in such a capacity than he could have rendered in any other. Before a national taste can be made effective it must be instructed, and before it is instructed it must be created. Britton himself was of course no designer. He did not even attempt to teach what good design ought to be. But for many years he supplied the public with illustrations and descriptions of ancient English architecture which had previously been familiar to the anti- quary alone. He helped, and successfully helped, to secure for Mediaeval remains that kind of interest which a sense of the picturesque and a respect for historical associations are most likely to create. While Britton was thus enlisting the sympathies of the amateur
world, two architects were engaged in preparing a practical and valu- able work for the use of professional students. The examples of Gothic architecture which had hitherto been selected for publication, were chiefly those which either served to illustrate a principle in the history of the style, or possessed some picturesque attractions in the way of general effect. Bat neither of these were of real service to the practical architect, who required geometrical and carefully measured drawings of ancient roofs, doors, and windows to guide him in his designs, and to help him in reviving a style the details of which had been as yet most imperfectly studied. Pugin and Willson's c Speci- mens of Gothic Architecture' supplied this want. It was a happy accident which brought these men together—the one eminently quali- fied as a draughtsman for the task, the other equally fitted to under- take its literary labour. For the first time the structural glories of Westminster Hall were
revealed with mathematical nicety ; the graceful mouldings of York and Lincoln were accurately profiled on a large and intelligible scale; the towers and gateways of Oxford were measured with scrupulous care. Many an oriel window and groined porch, many a canopied |
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The ' Specimens of Gothic Architecture! 89
tomb and flying buttress, the proportions of which had been simply
guessed at by those who endeavoured to imitate its design, was now transferred to paper, line for line, with every dimension clearly figured, with every feature separately dissected and explained. Instead of the vague and frequently inaccurate sketches of ancient
tracery and groining which had previously been published, we find in this work plans and sections of stone vaulting and elevations of windows drawn out with the utmost care, the radius and centre of every seg- mental curve ascertained, and the c mitering' of every junction clearly shown. The individual character of * cusping,' once considered, if we may judge from early illustrations, a matter of little moment, is here rendered with singular fidelity. The same may be said of crockets, finials, and decorative panelling. The advantage of all this to the professional designer was immense.
The time had not yet arrived when architects, engaged in any impor- tant practice, thought it worth while to measure and study for them- selves the relics of Mediaeval architecture; still less had they reached that sort of skill which would have enabled them to design in the spirit of ancient art without absolutely reproducing its details. In this dilemma they had copied after a rough and ready fashion, and their copies were contemptible. But now, by simply turning over the leaves of a convenient volume, they were enabled for the first time to enrich their designs, and perhaps in some instances to work them, out as a whole, from ' Specimens' which were unimpeachably correct in style. The consequence may be easily imagined. An age of ignorance
was succeeded by an age of plagiarism. If an architect wanted a spire for his new church, there was that of St. Mary's at Oxford drawn to scale and ready for imitation. If a Gothic monument was to be raised in the same edifice, the altar tombs of Westminster Abbey, engraved in Pugin and Willson's book, supplied a series of examples for selection. The details of Crosby Hall, of Hampton Court, and of |
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go The Age of Plagiarism.
Eton College were adapted for many a modern country mansion.
The oriels of Lincoln Palace were revived in St. John's Wood. This was by no means a satisfactory state of things, but it was better
than that by which it had been preceded. Faithful copies of old work were at least more tolerable than bungling attempts at original design. And it was simply impossible for modern architects to originate success- ful designs in Gothic, until they had learned to appreciate the value of proportion, and had mastered the grammar of detail in ancient examples. 1 The Specimens of Gothic Architecture'' helped their studies in an eminent degree, and perhaps not less by the carefully written and well- arranged text than by the illustrations which formed the bulk of the volume. It is to be feared that Mr. Willson's share in the preparation of this work has never been thoroughly appreciated. But it must be evident to all who read his descriptions of the plates, and the intro- ductory essays which preface each volume, that he was thoroughly master of his subject, both in its antiquarian and artistic aspect. Pugin's own reputation was considerable, but it was destined to be far eclipsed by that of his son, whose career and works will be described in due course. |
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A Retrospect. 91
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CHAPTER VI.
HE publication of practical and accurately illustrated books
in Gothic Architecture may be considered as the main turning-point in the progress of the Revival, and for obvious reasons it is necessary to measure by a very different standard the artistic merits of work executed before and after this great assist- ance had been afforded to professional designers. We must also bear in mind the important influence brought to bear upon the movement by a gradually increasing conviction that our churches and other national relics of the Middle Ages ought not only to be kept in a state of repair, but also to be f restored' or (improved' as occasion might warrant. To realise what this then meant, and what it afterwards came to
mean, it may be advisable to turn back a little in our History. If, in the last century, an architect, led by any rare instinct of indi-
vidual taste or by any accidental circumstances, devoted his attention to Mediaeval Art with a view to its adaptation for a modern work, he was obliged to rely almost entirely on the advice and assistance of the antiquaries. James Essex, who was born at Cambridge and was brought up with a boyish admiration for King's College Chapel, may perhaps have been an exception to the rule. But it is probable that his friendship with Bentham, who had employed him, as a young man, to prepare illustrations for the famous c History of Ely ' (already mentioned), exer- cised no small influence on his early predilections. In those days there was little or no scope for an architect with
mediaeval tendencies except in the way of restoration. The choir of Ely Cathedral was altered under his direction in 1770, and during a |
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92 yames Essex.
period of some twenty years he superintended very extensive repairs in
the same building. He was afterwards employed on similar work at Lincoln Minster, where he erected a stone reredos, and at King's College Chapel, for the east end of which he designed a stone screen. The Memorial Cross at Ampthill may be mentioned as another of his works. He also enlarged and repaired the ancient mansion of Madingley, which is well known to Cambridge men of our own time as the residence selected for the Prince of Wales while he remained at the University. He repaired the Tower of Winchester Cathedral, and carried out what were then called f improvements' at Merton and Balliol Colleges, Oxford. Some of these were important works in their way, and, no doubt, led to many others which were subsequently undertaken under the plea of 'restoration.' Essex may be fairly described as the first professional architect of the last century who made a study of Gothic. But he was far from a thorough appreciation of its merits.* At the time that Essex died (1784), James Wyatt had, in the
opinion of contemporary critics, just established his reputation as a Gothic architect by the remodelling of Mr. Barrett's house at Lee, which has been already mentioned, and which won the admiration of Horace Walpole. In one of Lord Orford's letters (1782) he says:— I have seen, over and over again, Mr. Barrett's plans, and approve them
exceedingly. The Gothic parts are classic : you must consider the whole as Gothic, modernised in parts—not as what it is, the reverse. Mr. Wyatt, if more employed in that style, will show as much taste and imagination as he does in Grecian. And again, in a letter to Mr. Barrett himself, he admits the defects
of Strawberry Hill, and adds, f My house was but a sketch by beginners: yours is finished by a great master.' * It is stated that, while professionally engaged on the works at Ely Cathedral,, Essex
advised the destruction of the Galilee and South-west transept, as being ' neither useful nor ornamental' and ' not worth preserving.' |
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yames IVyatt. 93
Posterity, judging from Wyatt's later works, as for instance the
Military Academy at Woolwich, his alterations of Windsor Castle, and his design for the (old) House of Lords, will scarcely feel inclined to confirm this opinion, or indeed to regard him in the light of a master at all. But the lapse of a century has brought about a great revolution in public taste, and with it a deeper study of Mediaeval Art. No English architect has perhaps been so much overrated by his
friends, or so unfairly abused by his enemies, as James Wyatt. It is probable that both praise and blame were honestly given, but neither his admirers nor his maligners have done him thorough justice. Raised by private interest and the caprice of public taste to be the fashionable architect of his day—loaded with commissions from every quarter, patronised by Bagot and flattered by Walpole—it is no wonder that this highly favoured and fortunate gentleman not only believed himself to be a great architect, but induced the world to think so too. The country squires who sent for him to embellish their family seats, the Oxford dons who allowed him to pull down and rebuild the ancient colleges of their University, the Deans and Chapters who committed our noble cathedrals to his notions of improvement and restoration, never stopped to inquire what qualifications he had for the several tasks which he only too readily undertook, or what amount of personal supervision he could afford to allot to each. It was sufficient for these illustrious patrons and reverend dilettanti to know that Mr. Wyatt was the c eminent' architect of their day. Artistic reputation has a rapidly accumulative quality. Everybody had employed him, and therefore everybody continued to do so. It would almost have been bad ton to seek for assistance elsewhere. Other practitioners might have his ability, but who had heard of them ? In consulting a person of Mr. Wyatt's reputation, the world of fashion thought it was quite safe. At first sight this seems reasonable enough. The most distinguished
physician of his day will always command, and has a right to command, |
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94 Wyatt s Professional Practice.
the most extensive practice. The most noted counsel will get the
most briefs. The most popular preacher will attract the largest congregations. But it must be remembered that in the consulting room, in the law court, and the pulpit we can at least secure the personal presence and individual talent of our favourite doctor, lawyer, or divine. In the field of architectural practice it is different. The mere name of
an architect goes a great way. The rest is a matter of conscience. A man may throw his whole energy into the work on which he happens to be employed, or he may satisfy himself and his employers by occasional visits. He may bring all his inventive power and skill to bear upon the design, or he may simply hand over a slight sketch to be worked out entirely by his assistants. In short, he may make an art of his calling, or he may make it a mere business; and in proportion as he inclines to one or the other of these two extremes, he will generally achieve present profit or posthumous renown. If Wyatt did not make a fortune by his profession, it was certainly
from no undue prominence of artistic feeling. His practice was large and lucrative. His designs do not seem to have given him any very great trouble to prepare. It is recorded that many of them were improvised and even executed in his travelling carriage as he rolled along the road to his country clients. He was a great man in his way, and no doubt a pencil sketch by Mr. Wyatt was thought more valuable than a whole set of working drawings prepared by an inferior hand. Can we blame him if, when commissions poured in upon him from every side, he accepted them all, dashed off his notions upon paper, left them to be realised by his subordinates, and took no pains to consider and revise them, lest he should meanwhile be losing another job ? If this sort of practice is to be condemned, let us call it the fault, not of the overworked architect, but of the public who insist on giving him more than he can possibly manage, with credit to him- self, to undertake. The very extent of Wyatt's professional employ- |
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JVyatfs 'Improvements' 95
ment must have left him little or no leisure for the study of ancient
examples ; and the consequence was that, in instances where he ought to have led, or at least to have tempered and corrected the vitiated taste of his day, he simply pandered to it. So long as this was confined to the design of modern mansions, no great harm was done. The present inheritors of many a country house erected under his instructions may indeed deplore the ignorance of their grandsires in adopting a style of architecture which is c Gothic' only in the original and contemptuous sense of the word. It may have brought discredit on the cause of the Revival, and to some extent retarded its progress. Still, it involved no national loss; it inflicted no positive injury on the nobler and purer works of a previous age. But when our fair English churches and venerable colleges were committed, one after another, to Wyatt's care, when he was invested with full power not only to restore but to alter and fimprove' these ancient structures, the result was melancholy indeed. Durham, Winchester, Salisbury, and too many other cathedrals bore for a long while, and in some cases still bear, painful evidence of his presumption or ignorance. And even in cases where a later and more educated taste has removed his ill-devised additions, and replaced features which he was permitted to destroy, one cannot help feeling that such repairs, however well-intentioned and skilfully executed, can never make the building what it was, or satisfactorily realise the spirit of its original design. The Revival of the Pointed style, for ecclesiastical and other build-
ings in this country, has led in our own day to a question on which the medievalists are divided against themselves. Happily for their cause England is still rich in examples of a school of art which, after three centuries of neglect and contumely, has been hailed as one eminently fitted by grace, convenience, and national characteristics for modern readoption. But though these venerable monuments have survived, as it were, to plead their cause, most of them have suffered terribly from the ravages of time, fanaticism, or wilful negligence. Cathedrals |
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g6 Imperfect 'Restorations!
in which the thurible once swang its incense high up into roof and
vault, churches which needed no further warmth than that which they received from the flame of votive candles and the constant pre- sence of worshippers who thronged to Mass, have long grown damp and mouldy from disuse. Those old baronial halls, which once echoed with the clank of armour and noise of revelry, are silent and deserted now; those ample fireplaces, once piled high with oak and pinewood, are cold and empty; and rain and wind beat in through mullioned windows, which once cast a gay and chequered light upon the rush- strewn floor. Of course, one's first impulse would be, if only for association's sake,
to rescue these fast-decaying relics of a by-gone age—to replace the rotten timbers with sound wood—to fill in with newly-moulded voussoirs those cruel gaps in arch and groin—to pull out the aged, crumbling imposts and corbels and set fresh stone-carving in their places—to exchange the battered old casements for modern painted glass—to reconstruct, on what we consider the original model, every part which we think fit to pull down. This is what the parson or the country squire—maybe the architect himself—does, and calls it c restoration.' It is generally a well-intentioned work, but unfortunately, in nine cases out of ten, it defeats its own purpose. These good people fancy they are perpetuating the design of their forefathers. In reality they are falsifying it. Let us take a case in point. The jamb mouldings of an ancient doorway need repair. They are chipped and rubbed away in some places more than in others. The mason who is em- ployed on the job selects one stone which appears to him less damaged than the rest, and moulds his new quoins as nearly as he can in imita- tion of this example. The probability is that he will not be very careful; so, when the jamb is set up, to prevent any trifling inaccura- cies, the old work is l tooled' over, and the whole is rubbed down together. When the c restoration ' is complete, will any one undertake to say how much of this doorway is new and how much old, or how far |
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Old and Modern Sculpture. 97
it may be reckoned upon as a transcript of that which once stood in its
place, when we remember that the depth of a quarter of an inch may make all the difference in the contour of a moulding ? But this is not the worst to be apprehended. If the reproduction of the mouldings be attended with difficulty, what can we say of wood and stone carving in its wider sense ? Every one who has studied the principles of Mediaeval art knows how much its character and vitality depend upon the essential element of decorative sculpture—on the spirit of what Mr. Ruskin has called c noble grotesque,' in its nervous types of animal life and vigorous conventionalism of vegetable form. The capitals, the corbels, the bosses, the enriched spandrils of Pointed Architecture, are the jewels—and more than the jewels, the very blossom and fruit—of that prolific style. To copy these line for line, even when sound and fresh from the chisel, and yet preserve the spirit of the original, would have been a difficulty in the best ages of art. The Mediaeval sculptors never—to use an artistic phrase—repeated themselves. If the con- ditions of their work required a certain degree of uniformity in design, they took care to aim at the spirit, but not the letter, of symmetry. Part might balance part in a general way, but not with that slavish precision which could be tested with the rule and compass. Indeed, common sense points to the fact that no noble work can be thus tran- scribed without losing in effect. But modern carvers employed in Restoration' are not unfrequently men who can only be trusted to copy in the most literal sense of the word. The fragments which serve them for a model are frequently mutilated, and afford to any but the most experienced eye a very incorrect notion of their original form. The consequence is that a copy is too frequently produced not only deficient in spirit, but with the same degree of accuracy which might be expected from a Chinese engraver who should undertake to imitate line for line and spot for spot a damaged print. Of course in large works, and where the supervision of an efficient architect is secured, these mistakes are avoided; but there remains the broad fact that many of H
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98 yudicious Repairs.
our f decorative' sculptors, modern carvers with quite as much mechanical
skill and twice as good working tools as their Gothic ancestors, can do little more than tamely copy the inventions of others. Under these circumstances, we cannot hope that their work will be worthy to stand in place of that executed by men whose hands realised the inventions of their own fertile fancy—who took the birds of the air and the flowers of the field for their models, but who seemed to know instinctively the true secret of all decorative art, which lies in the suggestion and sym- bolism rather than the presumptuous illustration of natural form. Does it follow from this that we are to suffer our cathedrals, our
Tudor mansions, and other monuments of antiquity to perish for want of timely succour ? By no means. There is much useful work which can be done, and done honestly, towards preserving such buildings from decay. Any mason can square a stone and put it in its proper place, or secure the safety of a tottering wall. There is work for the carpenter, the plumber, the slater, and others whose handicraft is of a purely mechanical kind. But the thought of the old artist sculptor— his wit, his satire, his love of leaves and flowers, his gay or grim notions of life and death—these we must see fade away before our eyes and let them pass. We cannot reanimate the mouldering freestone, or realise with a sober modern chisel the wayward fancies of the Middle Ages. Before, therefore, we f restore,' let us endeavour to preserve what still remains to us of our old national architecture—let us watch its very fragments with a jealous eye, propping them up when needed, shielding them so far as we can from the effects of weather and wanton destruc- tion. If any portions are already past this care, and in absolute danger of falling, it is better to pull them down at once than falsify them with new work. A porch, a tower, or a window may frequently be rebuilt entirely with advantage; but then it should be ostensibly the work of the nineteenth century, and not be so incorporated with the rest as to deceive the student of the next generation. A brass plate or a stone tablet let into the wall might record in legible characters the date and |
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Restoration of Henry VIL's Chapel. 99
circumstances of the re-erection. There can be no objection to per-
petuating the style of the original buildings, but it is of far more importance to adopt the spirit than to follow the letter of the design. Thus, it may be presumed, would reason many of the rising school of
architects in our own time ; but in Wyatt's day, while the grammar of Mediaeval art had still to be re-acquired—while the sentiment which had begun to recommend it to popular favour remained, as yet, but a weak and misdirected sentiment, it was in vain to expect that restorations would be conducted on any other principle than that which suggests a literal reproduction of old work. In so far as Wyatt confined himself to this principle, he was successful; but when he presumed—and he frequently presumed—to alter and, as he thought, to improve upon the architecture of the Middle Ages, the result was a lamentable failure. The most notable instance of his ability in the field of restoration
is certainly that of Henry VII.'s Chapel at Westminster. During the last century the exterior of the building had been rapidly decaying, and, in a period of about twenty years, a sum exceeding 28,000/. had been spent on repairs. In the year 1803 a fire broke out in the roof which involved an expense of several thousand pounds, and the Dean (Dr. Vincent) and Chapter, feeling that the c Fabric Fund' which had been set apart for repairs was no longer sufficient to meet the annual outlay required, determined to apply to the Government for assistance. Accordingly a memorial was drawn up and presented to the Treasury in 1806. That department referred the subject to a Committee of Taste, who were good enough to promise their opinion on any plans for the restoration which might be submitted to them, but did nothing further. In the following year the Dean and Chapter, nothing daunted,
prepared another petition, this time to the House of Commons, stating that c the petitioners had long seen with extreme regret the decay and ruinous appearance of King Henry VII.'s Chapel, the most beautiful specimen of Gothic architecture in the kingdom, and perhaps in Europe.' They added that it appeared from the survey of their architect (Mr. H 2
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ioo Aid from Government.
Wyatt) that the decay had hitherto only affected the exterior of the
building; that the interior was still in a fairly sound state; and that, if the exterior were repaired before the weather was suffered to make further ravages, the whole structure might be preserved. The peti- tioners concluded by asking for an annual grant of 1,000/. and an additional sum of 1,000/. 'extraordinary' for the first year. The House appointed a Committee, who, as a first step, examined Wyatt as to the probable cost of the restoration. He stated that it would be difficult to estimate it exactly, but he conceived that about 14,800/. would be required for fnecessary repairs,' and probably 10,400/. for ornamental work. He added that the works might be completed in three years. As is often the case in such undertakings, it turned out in due course that both the time and the amount of money required had been considerably underrated. The House of Commons voted 2,000/. as the first instalment towards the work, and at Dr. Vincent's request the general arrangements for the scheme were left in the hands of a body of gentlemen, then known as the ' Committee for the Inspection of Models for National Monuments.' This Committee included among its members the Marquis of Stafford, the Marquis of Buckingham, Lord Aberdeen, Sir George Beaumont, Mr. Thomas Hope, Mr. R. Payne Knight, and other distinguished amateurs. But the Government showed its good sense by adding several artists to the Committee. Among these were Flaxman, Banks and Westmacott, three of the most eminent sculptors of the day. Sir Charles Long acted as chairman. Every care was taken to ensure the use of a good quality of stone
for the restoration. Gayfere, the abbey mason, who appears to have played a far more prominent part in the work than would be allotted to any similar official in our own time, was examined and directed to report on this subject. He visited Bath and St. Albans Abbey, and at length decided in favour of Kentish stone and that of Coomb Down quarries. An incident occurred during Gayfere's examination which shows the tendency, even in those days, to cheapen the cost of artistic |
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Confidence in PVyatt. 101
work at a sacrifice of its quality. Bernasconi's composition (a species
of terra cotta) had then come into use, and Gay fere was asked what he thought of the durability of this material, if it were employed instead of stone for the external carvings. The document from which these particulars are gleaned records no answer to this enquiry. Whether it was actually answered does not now signify. But, as a matter of fact, Bernasconi's composition was not used, and we may be thankful for the decision. Just as the works were to have been begun they were delayed by an
untoward accident. A vessel bringing 150 tons of stone from Bristol was wrecked off the Isle of Portland. In 1809 the restoration was fairly begun, and though some slight misunderstandings appear to have at first arisen between the Dean and Chapter and the Parliamentary Committee, it was carried on gradually and successfully for many years, grants being made by Government even during the war with France, until it was finally completed (long after Wyatt's death) in 1821. Restorations such as this, conducted with a careful reverence for
ancient work and an accurate reproduction of its detail, would have won for Wyatt the respect of his antiquarian contemporaries, and saved him from the censure of later critics. But. unfortunately he had had in the early days of his practice many cathedrals and other Mediaeval buildings of importance committed to his care by those who placed the fullest confidence in his ability, and who had themselves but a scanty acquaintance with even the elementary principles of Gothic art. It is not exactly on record that the ecclesiastical authorities of the day declared him to be a greater architect than Bertram of Salisbury or Waynflete of Winchester, but it is not improbable that they believed it. How far Wyatt may have been morally responsible for the deeds of vandalism which were too frequently carried on in his name; whether his vanity or his ignorance led him to remodel architectural work of the Middle Ages, the excellence of which he could never hope to imitate, may be doubtful; but the plain fact remains, that on |
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102 New College Chapel.
such occasions he far exceeded his professional duty, and that having
been called on to repair, he did not hesitate to alter and even to destroy. It was to be hoped that, at least, one stronghold of Mediaeval art
would have been proof against Wyatt's innovations. Oxford, as we have seen, had preserved, down to a late period, the traditions of a national style. In our own time it has distinguished itself by a strenuous and successful attempt to revive them. But a dark interval occurred between the two epochs, and though, during that interval, the University acquired many buildings which were creditable specimens of Italian architecture, the character of local Gothic sank to zero. So long as Hawksmoor's work at All Souls' College remains standing, it will probably retain the reputation of being the most debased travesty of Pointed Architecture in Oxford. Wyatt's designs did not exactly descend to this level, but they approached it. No one who has any reverence for Mediaeval art can examine the present condition of New College Chapel without a feeling of surprise that even in Wyatt's day such work as his plaster reredos, mean as it is in material, and vulgar in the extravagance of its detail, could have passed for restoration. Yet it is not improbable that, at the time when it was executed, the College dons considered it a finer specimen of art than that which had been doomed to destruction by Bishop Home. Westmacott's sculptured panels, in mezzo-relievo, are at least of real marble, and exhibit some inventive skill; but the dramatic action of his figures is completely out of character with the architecture of the building which they were intended to decorate. Fragments of the old sculpture, removed to make place for this work, may still be seen in the adjoining cloister. Im- partial critics, who compaie the Mediaeval carving with its modern sub- stitute, will, probably, consider the neat finish and anatomical correctness of Westmacott's groups a poor exchange for the earnest and vigorous, though somewhat rude, treatment of the old design. If Wyatt's innovations had been confined to decorative detail, more
excuse might be made for him at the present day. A style of art |
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Wyatt's Responsibilities. 103
which has fallen into neglect for two or three centuries is not likely to
be revived with much of its original spirit in the course of a few years. The natural tendency of modern uneducated taste is to set an undue value upon mere elaboration of ornament and on the literal imitation of natural forms. It is liable to mistake the noble abstractive treatment so well understood in past ages of art for ignorance or incapacity of hand. We may charitably suppose that Wyatt thought the fruit and foliage of his plaster reredos a real improvement on the crockets and finials of a Mediaeval sculptor. But that an architect who was entrusted to restore buildings erected in the Middle Ages should have presumed to sacrifice important and constructive features in more than one cathedral for the sake of satisfying his own notions of proportion and effect, is an example of intolerable vanity and ignorance. He who had studied in Rome the principles of classic architecture would, pro- bably, have been the first to resent an impertinent remodelling of the Pantheon. One might reasonably suppose that if he possessed half the respect for Gothic art with which he was accredited by his contem- poraries, he would have seen the same necessity for preserving the integrity of its remains. Unfortunately Lichfield, Durham, and Salis- bury bear evidence to the contrary. It is possible that much of the vandalism committed at this time,
under the plea of restoration, has been since unjustly attributed to Wyatt. But that he was in several well-known instances directly responsible for needless destruction and injudicious repairs is quite certain. How long such work would have been permitted to go on by those whose duty it was to watch with jealous care the venerable build- ings entrusted to their charge, may be doubted. Luckily, remonstrance was at hand from an unexpected quarter. It was administered sharply, au- thoritatively, and persistently, and,in course of time, with excellent effect. Mention has already been made of John Carter's c Specimens of
Ancient Sculpture and Painting,' published in 1786. But this and other works of the same class, and by the same hand, creditable as they |
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104 yohn Carter.
are to their author, will reflect less permanent honour on his memory
than the fact that, for a period of nearly twenty years, he employed his pen in a vigorous protest against the ruthless and ignorant f innovations ' of his day. The history of this doughty champion of Gothic architecture
may be sketched in a few lines. He was born in the middle of the last century. His father, who had carried on business which may be euphemistically described as that of a monumental sculptor, but which really included the manufacture of mantel-pieces, died in 1763, leaving his son at the early age of fifteen almost entirely dependent on his own exertions for a livelihood. The lad had been taken from school to assist his father in the preparation of the working drawings necessary to guide the workmen who executed his designs. This occu- pation taught him to use his pencil, which he soon employed to better purpose. In 1764 young Carter made a perspective view of the Herald's Tower, Windsor Castle—the first of a long series of similar productions, which at first brought him bread, and afterwards renown. Builders of the day, who seem to have frequently acted without the supervision of architects, gladly secured his artistic services. In 1786 he was engaged to prepare illustrations for the * Builder's Magazine,' probably the first professional journal brought out in this country. But a more important engagement dates from a few years previously,
when the Society of Antiquaries, recognising his delineative skill and knowledge of architecture, employed him to etch many of the views of ancient buildings, published under their direction. The cathedrals of Exeter, Durham, Gloucester, and York; the abbeys of Bath and St. Albans, with a host of others, became, in turn, subjects for his pencil. Every ancient building which he visited was useful to him in a twofold sense. He made drawings and he made notes. The drawings were a source of immediate profit. By means of the notes he, by degrees, laid up a store of archaeological information which, in course of time, placed him among the foremost antiquaries of the day. As an architect |
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His Antiquarian Tastes. 105
he seems to have had little or no practice. A small chapel at Sevenoaks,
a few almshouses, and a monument or two, are the only works on record for which he was directly responsible; but it is well known that he was frequently consulted by other members of the profession, who were in the habit of submitting their designs to him for approval or correction. The study of Mediaeval architecture had been almost an instinct with him from his earliest youth. His delight was to sketch, to measure, and to describe every ancient English building which he saw, and in such pursuits he passed the greater part of a long life. One other taste, indeed, he had, which occasionally beguiled him from his antiquarian researches. It was for that art which is allied to architec- ture by some mysterious link long imaged by poetical conception and not unfrequently confessed in the experience of ordinary life. He was passionately fond of music* It may easily be conceived that a man of Carter's accurate knowledge
and ardent temperament saw with a feeling stronger than impatience our national relics of Mediaeval architecture one by one perishing through neglect, injured by clumsy restoration, and in some cases being partially destroyed by ignorant attempts to improve upon their original design. In such instances, if we may believe his contemporary critics, he felt all the indignation which might be justified by a personal affront. If his private character had been attacked he could scarcely have been more inclined to resent the injury. The manner in which he did resent it was characteristic not only of the man but of the age in which he lived. Towards the middle of the year 1798 a letter was published in the c Gentleman's Magazine,' calling attention to certain injudicious repairs and alterations which had been carried on in Peterborough Cathedral. The writer signed himself c An Architect,' and if no further correspon- * Carter's enthusiasm for music led him, as an amateur, not only to perform but to
compose. He was the author of two operas, produced at one of the minor theatres, but long since forgotten—' The White Rose,' and ' The Cell of St. Oswald '—which were intended to illustrate dramatically English life in the Middle Ages. In each case the words, as well as the music, were his own. He also painted the scenery. |
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106 Letters in the ' Gentleman's Magazine!
dence had ensued, it is possible that he would have preserved his incog-
nito. But this letter was only the first of a long series which continued to appear, at intervals, in the same journal and under the same signa- ture, for the extraordinarily long period of twenty years. In the year 181.7 this remarkable correspondence was brought somewhat abruptly to a close, not, however, before the writer had begun to depart from his original theme, viz. the c Pursuits of Architectural Innovation.' The 212th letter promised that the subject should be continued, but the Fates had ordered otherwise. The writer had laid down his pen for the last time. The fact that Carter died in 1817 is scarcely required to prove the
authenticity of these letters. During the time which elapsed since the first appeared, considerable advance was made in the study of Gothic architecture. As years rolled on, other men might have been found equal to the task of criticising modern £ improvements' as shrewdly, as learnedly, and as carefully as Carter. But it may safely be asserted that no one else would have sustained the task with such prolonged energy and perseverance. It is true that the very nature of his ordinary occupation afforded
peculiar facilities for this additional work. Every sketch which he made was, to his appreciative eye, a fresh lesson in architectural style. Every tour which he made gave him an opportunity, not only for artistic study, but for critical inspection. At Gloucester he laments the injury caused by turning it into a place for periodical music meetings, and notices the absence of heraldic propriety in the restoration of sculp- tured details. At Canterbury he calls attention to the modern dis- figurement of Archbishop Wareham's monument and to the shameful condition of St. Augustine's Monastery.* At Lichfield the transept windows and the choir arches were walled up. At Salisbury the Beau- * Now rescued from desecration, restored, and converted into St. Augustine's (Mission-
ary) College, by the timely munificence of Mr. Beresford Hope, M.P., and the professional skill of Mr. W. Butterfield. This building will form the subject of some later remarks. |
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Effect of Carter's Remonstrance. 107
champ Chapel was destroyed. He found Winchester neglected and
Howden Church half in ruins. He visited the Welsh castles, and was ashamed of their dilapidations and still more deplorable repairs. The condition of the ancient churches of Coventry excited his pity and his anger. He went to Oxford, and finding himself excluded from Divine service at Magdalen College Chapel, was indignant not only with the architectural innovations, but with the ecclesiastical polity of the Esta- blishment. At Westminster he groaned over alterations which had been made, and deprecated others which were threatened in the Abbey. He waxed wroth, at discovering that while the New Courts of Justice were accepted as examples of good modern Gothic, the beautiful Chapel of St. Stephen was condemned to desecration as a dining room. These and a hundred other similar grievances formed the subject-
matter for the letters of f An Architect.' They declared war a outrance to modern innovation, by whatever hand or under whatever direction it was carried on. Sometimes this interference was resented by replies also published in the Magazine, and then a sharp controversy ensued, in which Carter generally came off victorious.* The style of his letters must not be judged by the literary standard of our own day. To the modern reader they will seem stilted and extravagant in language. But his remarks were always to the point, and when they were answered by an opponent, Carter returned again and again to the charge, bringing fresh arguments and new evidence in support of his original assertions. The information which he supplied and the criticism which he
offered must have been invaluable at the time. Thousands of readers who had previously regarded Gothic as a barbarous kind of architecture to which no recognised canon of taste would apply, learnt for the first * Occasionally the correspondence took a serious turn. At the conclusion of one of
his letters (January 1810), Carter, referring to the communications of'An Amateur,' who had contradicted him flatly on a point of fact, replied as follows: * The " Amateur" may be assured that I am ready to meet him on any ground, let his onset be what it may, question or answer, or otherwise !' It docs not, however, appear that any hostile encounter was the result of this challenge. |
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io8 William Atkinson.
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time their mistake. Many a country parson who had allowed his parish
church to fall into decay, must have been reminded that it was his duty to take an interest in its repair. Many a Dean and Chapter who had indulged in grand notions about cathedral c improvements,' paused before thev lent themselves to a work of destruction which was now so reasonably condemned. The sentiments of f An Architect' found grate- ful response, not only in the pages of the c Gentleman's Magazine,' but in other journals. Wyatt, for whose professional ability Carter appears to have entertained no small contempt, died in 1813, and thenceforth a new era began to dawn for the Gothic Revival. Of course it was long before restorations were conducted with that
careful attention to detail which can alone justify such repairs. The character of ancient mouldings and of sculpture ornament had still to be analysed and studied before the nineteenth-century architect could hope to approach the grace and refinement of the original forms which he professed to imitate. But the presumptuous folly of attempting to alter and improve upon work elevated by its excellence far beyond the aim of modern design and workmanship was now openly confessed and by degrees abandoned. The generation of British architects whose professional career ex-
tended from the past to the present century includes many names which have long been forgotten, and many others which will soon follow them into oblivion, but which were in their time more or less associated with the Revival of Gothic. In this list William Atkinson occupies an early and not undis-
tinguished place. Born at Bishop Auckland about 1773, he began life as a carpenter, but through the patronage of Dr. Barrington, then Bishop of Durham, he became a pupil of James Wyatt, and in 1797 obtained the gold medal of the Royal Academy. In the course of his practice he designed Scone Palace, Perthshire, for the Earl of Mans- field (1803-6); Rossie Priory for Lord Kinnaird (1810-15); Abbots- |
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L. N. Cottingham's Works. 109
ford, Roxburghshire, for Sir Walter Scott, and many other country
mansions in England and Scotland.* Between the years 1814 and 1822 Mr. L. N. Cottingham did some
service to the Revival by publishing several works in illustration of old English architecture. His plans, &c. of Westminster Hall appeared in 1822. Shortly afterwards he brought out a more voluminous work on Henry VII.'s Chapel. His working drawings of Gothic ornaments are ill-selected and coarse in execution, but curious as being perhaps the first full-size illustrations of Mediaeval carving published in this form. He built Snelston Hall in Derbyshire, and in 1825 designed a new central tower for Rochester Cathedral, besides restoring other portions of the same building. In 1829 he was the successful competitor for the restorations (completed in 1833) of the interior of Magdalen College, Oxford. Under his superintendence repairs were also carried on at Hereford Cathedral, St. Albans Abbey, and the Church of St. James at Louth. It is, however, as a collector of Mediaeval antiquities rather than as
an architect that his name has been chiefly associated with the Revival. In addition to a vast number of casts taken from capitals, bosses, and other examples of decorative sculpture in English and foreign cathedrals, he had acquired many specimens of original carved work in wood and stone—in some cases entire features of buildings which had been dismantled or pulled down. These, in addition to a host of other objects, including ancient furniture and metal-work, formed a most * It is necessary to distinguish this architect from others of the same surname, and all
born in the last century, viz. : Peter Atkinson (the son of a carpenter), who practised at York; Peter Atkinson, the son and partner of the last-mentioned, who was employed by the Duke of Devonshire, and who erected many churches for the Ecclesiastical Commis- sioners between 1821 and 1831 ; Thomas Atkinson, who made additions to the Archi- episcopal Palace, Bishopsthorpe, near York, in 1769; and T. W. Atkinson, a London architect, who published * Gothic Ornaments Selected from the different Cathedrals and Churches of England,' in 1829. |
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no yohn C. Buckler.
valuable and interesting Mediaeval museum long before public energy
or national funds had been devoted to a similar purpose-* Among Carter's friends and contemporaries was Mr. John Buckler,
F.S. A., who published some fine f Views of the Cathedral Churches of England and Wales, with Descriptions.' His son, Mr. John Chessell Buckler, designed in 1825 the modern portion of Costessey Hall, Norfolk, for Lord Stafford—one of the most important and successful instances of the Revival in Domestic Architecture. It is built of red and white brick, with stone dressings, and the style is Tudor, of the type adopted in Thornbury Castle.f The general appearance of the building is that of an irregular but
well grouped and interesting composition, in which stepped gables, angle turrets, and richly moulded chimney-shafts form picturesque features, and exhibit a knowledge of detail and proportion far in advance of contempo- rarv work. In the centre of the block rises a solid square tower, crowned with machicolations and an embattled parapet. Internally the rooms are fitted up with great care, the carved ceilings,
stone mantel-pieces, and carved panel-work being all of rich design, and in character with the external architecture ; which is more than can be said for many of the so-called Gothic mansions of the day. The old mansion, erected in the reign of Queen Mary, still occupies
the site of the intended hall and principal staircase. The chapel erected early in the present century has been already mentioned. Mr. J. C. Buckler was largely employed at Oxford in the restora-
tions of and additions to the various buildings of the University. St. Mary's Church, as well as Oriel, Brasenose, Magdalen, and Jesus Colleges, bear evidence of his professional handiwork. He also restored Oxburgh Hall, Norfolk, and Hengrave Hall, Suffolk. Among the * Mr. Cottingham's collection was sold by public auction a few years after his death,
which occurred in 1847. f Erected in Henry VIIT.'s reign by Edward Stafford, Duke of Buckingham, an ancestor
of the present Baron.
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Mr. Buckler's Protest. 111
country mansions which he was entrusted to design may be mentioned
Dunston Hall, Norfolk, and Butleigh Court, in Somersetshire. In 1823 Buckler published a description of Magdalen College, adding to it an account of the c innovations ' then recently executed there, and a protest against others which were threatened. This little work, which for personal reasons existing at the time was published anonymously, did good service at Oxford. It argued well and earnestly for the preserva- tion of the old colleges, which had been sadly maltreated under the guise of c improvement.' Antiquaries, in short, no longer stood alone as champions of the Revival. The cause was espoused by many profes- sional architects of ability and repute. This would not in itself have sufficed to secure the support of public taste. But public taste received a stimulus of its own, as we shall presently see. |
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Sir Walter Scott.
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112
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CHAPTER VII.
ANIFOLD as the influences are to which the modern revival
of Gothic Architecture have been referred, they may, if taken broadly, be classed under three heads, viz. literary, religious, and antiquarian. To the first may be assigned the taste for mediae- valism, which was encouraged in this country by the writings of Sir Walter Scott, Bishop Percy, and Dr. Lingard ; in France by those of Chateaubriand ; and in Germany by those of Friedrich von Schlegel. It is Impossible to read either the poems or the novels of Scott without perceiving how greatly their interest depends on that class of sentiment, half chivalrous and half romantic, which is centered in the social life and history, the faith, the arts, and the warfare of the Middle Ages. < Ivanhoe,' c The Abbot,' < Woodstock,' ( The Fair Maid of Perth,' and f The Monastery,' abound in allusions to the Architecture, either military or ecclesiastical, of a bygone age. It forms the background to some of the most stirring scenes which the author depicts. It invests with a substantial reality the romances which he weaves. It is often inti- mately associated with the very incidents of his plot. We need not necessarily infer that Scott possessed anything more
than a superficial knowledge of the art which he so enthusiastically ad- mired. On the contrary, the descriptions which he gives of Mediaeval buildings not unfrequently betray an ignorance of what have since been called the true principles of Gothic design. The poetic but erroneous notion that the groined vault of a cathedral church had its prototype in the spreading branches of a tree-—the comparison of clustered shafts to bundles of lances bound with garlands—may raise a smile from those who have studied with any attention the real and structural beauties of old |
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The JVaverley Novels. 113
English Architecture. The truth is that the service which Scott ren-
dered to the cause of the Revival was to awaken popular interest in a style which had hitherto been associated, except by the educated few, with ascetic gloom and vulgar superstition. With the aid of his magic pen, the Castle of Coningsburgh is filled as of yore with doughty war- riors ; Branksome Hall is restored to its feudal splendour ; Kenilworth becomes once more the scene of human love, and strife, and tragedy; the aisles of Melrose echo again with a solemn requiem. The Waverley novels and the poems which preceded them were read
with an eager interest which we can only realize in this blase generation when we remember the class of fiction, in prose or verse, with which our grandsires had been previously supplied. With the exception of Horace Walpole and Mrs. Radcliffe, no author of any note had sought for inspiration in the old-world lore; and though the (Castle of Otranto ' and the c Romance of the Forest' have had, no doubt, their admirers, the Mediaeval element which they contain bears no nearer relation to c Ivanhoe' and ( The Monastery' than the Gothic of Batty Langley does to the designs of Butterfield. The works of Fielding and Smollett—and, if we may compare small
things with great, of Richardson—derived their chief interest from the delineation of character in scenes of contemporary life. Mr. Thomas Jones and Mr. Roderick Random are essentially modern heroes. Their respective adventures point a doubtful moral to a disreputable tale, not without redeeming points of sparkling wit, trenchant satire, and genuine philosophy. But we may search them, and many similar novels of the same age and class, in vain to find the least evidence of that order of sentiment which depends on national tradition or reverence for the past. Sir Walter Scott was the first historical novelist that Englancf produced. Whether he gave a reliable picture of social life in the Middle Ages may be doubted. It is the province of such a writer to deal with his material after the manner of all artists. He must keep virtues for his hero and faults for those who cross his hero's 1
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114 The Romance of Archceology.
path. He must fill in the lights and shades of his story as best befits
its climax. He must keep probability subservient to effect. All this Sir Walter did to perfection, and he did more. He drew public atten- tion to the romantic side of archaeology. It had hitherto been regarded as a formal science. He charmed it into an attractive art. And this he accomplished without any parade of the special knowledge which he had acquired in the study of old English life and its picturesque accessories. We find in his romances none of that laboured accuracy in regard to detail which has characterised the writings of those who have endea- voured in a similar field to unite the taste of the dilettante with the imagination of the novelist. In reading such a work as the c Last Days of Pompeii,' one is struck with the palpable effort which its author makes to describe and turn to dramatic account the latest facts and discoveries concerning the disinterred city. Scarcely an in- cident is recorded, scarcely a scene is described, which does not reveal the narrator's aim at correctness in his studies of what a painter would call f still life.' It is as if he had invoked the shade of Sir William Hamilton instead of the Muse of Fiction to aid him in his task, and had composed his story after spending a week in the Museo Bourbonico. With far more subtle skill and magic power, Scott entered on his
work. The pictures which he sets before us of life in the Middle Ages are not encumbered with needless minutiae of material fact. The aspect of the dwellings, the costume, the household gods of our ances- tors, is not indeed forgotten, but they are not allowed to obtrude on the reader's attention, and they are always kept subordinate to the interest which is elicited by character and conversation. It is some- what remarkable that the fAntiquary,' a novel in which Scott might have found it easy to display his acquaintance with the relics of ancient art, should contain so little evidence of the author's taste in that direction. Mr. Oldbuck, who is familiar with the rare quarto of the Augsburg Confession, who is an authority in heraldic matters, whose wrath is |
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Progress of Mediceval sentiment, 115
kindled by the spurious poems of Ossian, and who quotes everything
he has read from Virgil to a Border ballad, would have cut a poor figure in the Camden Society. He collects indeed Roman lamps, and Scottish thumbscrews, but for aught we can gather from his discourse, he knows no more of Jedburgh Abbey than of the Palace of the Caesars. The Mediaeval sympathies which Scott aroused were enlisted less by
reference to the relics of Pointed architecture than by the halo of romance which he contrived to throw around them. The fortunes of the Disinherited Knight, the ill-requited love of poor Rebecca, the very jokes of Wamba and the ditties of the Bare-footed Friar, did more for the Gothic Revival than all the labours of Carter and Rickman. The description of the desecrated church in the c Abbot' excites our interest not merely because its niches have been emptied and its altar despoiled, but because it forms a background to the figures of Magdalen and Roland. The castles of the Rhine appear to every modern tourist picturesque monuments of antiquity, but they acquire a double charm in association with the story of c Anne of Geierstein.' It would be difficult to overrate the influence which Scott's poetry
has had on both sides of the Tweed, in encouraging a national taste for Mediaeval architecture. Every line in the c Lay of the Last Min- strel,' every incident in c Marmion,' is pregnant with that spirit of romance which is the essence of traditional art. The time may perhaps have now arrived when the popular mind can dispense with the spell of association, and learn to admire Gothic for its intrinsic beauty. But in the early part of this century, England could boast of no such author as Mr. Ruskin, to teach, discriminate, and criti- cise, in matters of taste. Guided by his advice and influence, we may succeed in kindling the Lamps of Life and Power. But fifty years ago, in the darkest period which British art has seen, we were illumined by one solitary and flickering flame, which Scott contrived to keep alive. It was the Lamp of Memory. Strange as it may appear to us in these days of advanced ritualism,
1 2
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Domestic Architecture.
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the earliest instances of the application of Gothic as a definite style at
that period were to be found, not in the churches, but in the mansions of modern England. In our own time, the most bigoted opponents of the style are generally found to admit that if unsuitable for a dwelling, it may with propriety be employed—to use their own language—for a 1 place of worship.' But when Scott was in the zenith of his fame, the reverse of this opinion would appear, at first sight, to have prevailed. While many country houses of the nobility and gentry were designed, or rebuilt, in what was then known as the Castellated style, almost every modern church that was erected aped the general arrangement of a Greek temple, or the pseudo-classic type of the Renaissance. The explanation of this apparent anomaly becomes obvious when we
remember the condition of things under which it occurred. In the first place, the revived taste-for Mediaeval Architecture was as yet caviare to the multitude. It seemed but natural that the landed proprietors—the heads of ancient families, the source of whose lineage was intimately asso- ciated with the early welfare of this country—should feel some interest in a style which kept alive the memories of the past, and symbolised at once the romance of history and the pride of name. But the majority of parsons and churchwardens, the committee-men and vestrymen, of a town parish, could scarcely be expected to participate in these senti- ments. Their notions of grand architecture were linked to the Five Orders, or based on a glimpse of Stuart's Athens; their ideas of devotion were centered in the family pew. And it was only in town parishes that the church architect then found exercise for his ability. The expediency of providing additional churches for the increasing population of rural districts was a problem which had not as yet presented itself to the parochial mind. And it must be confessed that if it had, the ne- cessity of acting on it would have been doubtful. A large parish does not always, and certainly did not in those days, mean a large congrega- tion. In plain language, it would have been absurd to build new churches while the old ones remained half filled. How far the clergy, and how |
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The Church of ' the Period' 117
far the people themselves, were responsible for this state of things, it
is difficult to estimate. But of one fact we may be quite sure, that at this period the Church of England had lost its hold on popular favour, and ecclesiastical sentiment was almost unknown. No doubt much of the apathy which then prevailed was due to the uninteresting character of the service and all that pertained to it. To the zealous artist or devotee of the present day, the interior of a church fitted up at" that period would have presented indeed a melancholy spectacle. We must tax the recollections of our childhood, if we would realise to some extent the cold and vapid nature of the ceremonies which passed for public devotion in the days of our grandfathers. Who does not remember the air of grim respectability which per-
vaded, and in some cases still pervades, the modern town church of a certain type, with its big bleak portico, its portentous beadle, and muffin- capped charity boys ? Enter and notice the tall neatly grained witness- boxes and jury-boxes in which the faithful are impanelled ; the f three- decker ' pulpit placed in the centre of the building; the lumbering gallery which is carried round three sides of the interior on iron columns ; the wizen-faced pew-opener eager for stray shillings; the earnest penitent who is inspecting the inside of his hat; the patent warming apparatus ; the velvet cushions which profane the altar; the hassocks which no one kneels on; the poor-box which is always empty. Hear how the clerk drones out the responses for a congregation too genteel to respond for themselves. Listen to the complicated discord in which the words of the Psalmist strike the ear, after copious revision by Tate and Brady. Mark the prompt, if misdirected zeal, with which old ladies insist on testing the accuracy of the preacher's memory by turning out the text. Observe the length, the unimpeachable propriety, the overwhelming dulness of his sermon ! Such was the Church, and such the form of worship which prevailed
in England while this century was still in its teens. It may have been, and probably was, well suited to the religious feeling of the day, |
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118 Dr. Milner.
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The reaction which has since ensued may have its errors and its dan-
gers. But one fact is certain, that that art, with the history of which we have alone to deal in these pages, had sunk at this period to its lowest level, and required the services of more than one doughty champion to rescue it from oblivion. It is a common error to suppose that the Church of Rome has en-
couraged to any great extent, or for any special purpose, the Revival of Gothic Architecture. Those who have witnessed the gorgeous ceremonial with which her rites are celebrated in Italy, will be aware how utterly in- dependent they have become of any association with Mediaeval usage, so far as outward appearance and ecclesiastical appointments are concerned. It is, however, remarkable that two of the first, and in their time un- questionably the most eminent, apologists for the revival of the style in this country were Roman Catholics, viz. Milner and Pugin. Beyond the fact that their creeds and their architectural tastes were in common, no parallel can be drawn between them. Both, indeed, contributed to the literature of art, but under different conditions, at a different time, and in a very different vein. Dr. Milner was a priest and a bishop of his Church. Pugin was a layman and a professed architect. Dr. Milner wrote with the sober judgment of an antiquary; Pugin with the fiery enthusiasm of a religious convert. Finally, Milner, who was born in 1752, preceded Pugin by nearly half a century. It was in the year 1792 that Dr. Milner resolved to build a new
chapel at Winchester, in place of one which, erected in the seventeenth century, had fallen into a ruinous state. Of this work he says (in his ' History of Winchester ') :— Instead of following the modern style of building churches and chapels, which
are in general square chambers with small sash windows and fashionable decora- tions hardly to be distinguished, when the altars and benches are removed, from common assembly rooms, it was concluded upon to imitate the models in this kind which have been left to us by our religious ancestors, who applied them- selves to the cultivation and perfection of ecclesiastical architecture. |
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The Antiquities of Winchester. 119
Although competent to give general instructions for the execution of
this work, Dr. Milner had the good sense to seek the professional assistance of Mr. John Carter, of whose talents he always had a very high opinion. f I know one man, indeed,' he writes in one of his essays, c who is
eminently qualified to direct any work of this nature, and who, without either an original or a copy to look at, could sit down and make pure and perfect drawings for any kind of building in the Pointed Style, from a monument to a cathedral, according to any one of its different periods. But this architect.....is so inflexibly strict in adhering to ancient
rules and practice, that he would not build for a prince who should
require the slightest deviation from them.' This was high praise in 1800. In some respects, perhaps, it would
be higher praise at the present day. The chapel is described by Dr. Milner himself as ( a light Gothic
building, coated with stucco resembling freestone, with mullioned windows, shelving buttresses, a parapet with open quatrefoils, and crocketed pinnacles terminating in gilt crowns.' This description is not very suggestive of the glories of Gothic art in its modern Revival. But if we remember the benighted period at which it was written, we may be thankful for this link, however humble, in the chain of our history. Dr. Milner's c Survey of the Antiquities of Winchester,' a carefully
written and, for its time, an erudite work, was chiefly remarkable for the short, but now famous essay which it contained, c On the Rise and Progress of the Pointed Arch.' This essay, together with three others by Professor Warton, the Rev. J. Bentham, and Capt. Grose, all bearing on the subject of Gothic Architecture, were published by Taylor in 1800, with an introductory letter by Milner. To dilate on the various opinions expressed by these gentlemen would probably be tedious, and would certainly not be edifying to the reader.of these pages. Dr. Milner himself seems inclined to lose patience with two of the learned |
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120 Milner s Literary JVorks.
antiquaries, who, differing in their nomenclature, are at variance on the
question, whether Salisbury Cathedral is or Is not a Gothic structure. In his own Essay and Introduction, which form the most interesting part of the volume, he uses for the first time an expression which has since been universally accepted as a generic term for the Architecture of the Middle Ages, viz. the Pointed Style. The origin of the Pointed Arch has. proved a subject of as much
fruitless discussion as the authorship of Junius, or the identification of the Man in the Iron Mask. In Britton's Architectural Antiquities alone no fewer than sixty-six different theories appear on the subject. Milner's had at least the merit of simplicity. But the origin of the Pointed Arch, as Mr. Fergusson has justly observed, is after all far less important than the history of its use, and the light which the last- mentioned work has thrown upon that history is worth all the countless conjectures regarding a structural feature whose form was probably defined by expedience rather than by sentimental or aesthetic considerations. In 1810^ Milner was invited by Dr. Rees to furnish an article on
Gothic Architecture for his Encyclopaedia. The research necessary for this purpose led to the publication of a c Treatise on the Ecclesiasti- cal Architecture of England during the Middle Ages,' which appeared in the following year—a scholar-like and interesting work, which it is impossible to peruse without feeling how far its author was in advance of his time, not only as an antiquary, but as a man of taste. To him we are indebted for one of the earliest protests against the injudicious restoration, or rather remodelling, of our ancient cathedrals. The works carried out under Wyatt's professional direction at Durham and at Salisbury had given, as we have seen, great dissatisfaction among the antiquaries of the day. Dr. Milner became their spokesman in a pamphlet entitled c A Dissertation on the Modern Style of altering Ancient Cathedrals, as exemplified in the Cathedral of Salisbury.' His charges against Wyatt were thus summed up: f the loss of several |
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Milner's Attack on Wyatt. 121
valuable monuments of antiquity; the violation of the ashes and the
memorials of many illustrious personages of former times, and the de- struction of the proportions, and of the due relation of the different parts of the Cathedral.' These were serious charges, and that they were made with some acri-
mony may be inferred from the fact that the Essay, which was to have been read before the Society of Antiquaries, had to be withdrawn. It was, however, printed in 1798 with the well-known lines from Horace, c Humano capiti,' &c, significantly prefixed as a motto on the title-page. Whatever opinion we may now form of the justice of Mil- ner's strictures upon Wyatt, it is impossible to help admiring the shrewdness with which they are supported by arguments the very essence of which proves the writer's thorough acquaintance with the leading principles of Mediasval design. Thus, in referring to the so-called c uniformity,' then wrongly considered to be an essential element of Ecclesiastical Architecture, he says :— This I have proved to be contrary to the original nature and design of
Cathedrals, and likewise to the form in which they are everywhere built. For when the Lady Chapel is let into the Choir of Salisbury Church, does it form one and the same room in conjunction with it ? No more than a small cham- ber does with an adjoining spacious hall when the door of it is left open. And when the transepts are swept clean of their chapels and monuments, and nothing is seen in them but the naked high whitewashed walls, do they assimilate and become uniform with the lengthened halls which these gentlemen are so fond of? By no means. On the contrary, it is plain that they would destroy them also if it were in their power to do so. Milner was well pleased to find that Horace Walpole (then Lord
Orford) entirely agreed with him on this point, and had so expressed himself in a letter to Gough, which the author took care to print at the end of his Essay. Midway in point of time between Milner and Pugin, and possessing,
though in a minor degree, the talents of both, Thomas Rickman, as an |
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122 Thomas Rickman.
architect and author, plays no unimportant part in the history of the
Revival. His churches are perhaps the first of that period in which the details of old work were reproduced with accuracy of form. Up to this time antiquaries had studied the principles of Mediaeval architecture, and to some extent classified the phases through which it had passed, while architects had indirectly profited by their labours when endeavour- ing to imitate in practice the works of the Middle Ages. Rickman united both functions in one man. He had examined the best examples of Gothic with the advantage of technical information. He did his best to design it after the advantage of personal study. In the science of his art he will not, of course, bear comparison with Willis. In the analysis of its general principles he must yield to Whewell. In capa- bility of invention he ranks, even for his time, far below Pugin. But it may be fairly questioned whether; if we consider him in the twofold capacity of a theorist and a practitioner, he did not do greater service to the cause than either his learned contemporaries or his enthusiastic disciple. It is probable that what may be called the grammar of Mediaeval
architecture interested him more than its constructive problems or its religious associations. With the latter indeed he could have had but little sympathy. As a member of the Society of Friends he must, in the course of his studies, have investigated with mixed feelings the iconography and symbolism of a faith so intimately allied with his beloved Gothic—so distantly removed from the simplicity of his early creed. Whether he laid aside his scruples so far as to bow down (with aesthetic reverence at least) in the House of Rimmon—or whether he sensibly considered that his conscience was not committed by his taste, we need not stop to enquire. Certain it is that Rickman was largely employed by the clergy for ecclesiastical and other works in various parts of England. In Bristol, Birmingham, Leeds, Preston, Liverpool, Carlisle, and Canterbury, to say nothing of smaller towns and villages, he erected churches. In Northumberland he designed a mansion for |
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St. Georges Church, Birmingham. 123
Sir E. Blackett; in Staffordshire another for Miss Herickes. Barfield
Lodge, near Bristol, Brunstock House, near Carlisle, and two residences (one for Colin Campbell) in the neighbourhood of Liverpool, were either executed or rebuilt under his instructions. To measure such works as these by the standard of modern taste in Gothic would be obviously unfair. To enter on any detailed account of their design, to attempt to fix their precise position as links in the chain of the Gothic Revival, would be tedious. It suffices to know that Rickman worked according to the light which was in him. It was indeed a light of no great brilliancy, but he turned it to good account, and it served in his day as a beacon to many, who without it would have groped in utter darkness. St. George's Church at Birmingham, built in 1822, may be accepted
as a fair specimen of Rickman's ability in design. Its style may be described as late Middle Pointed. It consists of a lofty nave, with clerestory, north and south aisles, a square tower at the west, and flanked by porches, and a sort of parvise at the east, connected with the main body of the church by flying buttresses. The window tracery is remark- ably good in motive, but, sad to say, is all executed in cast iron. For this unfortunate solecism various reasons might be assigned, the most probable one being that it was a cheap means of obtaining an effective fenestration. Yet it is remarkable that no other structural meanness is observable in other parts of the building. The walls are of fair thick- ness, stouter indeed than those in some of Pugin's churches. The tower, especially its upper part, is well designed ; and but for the rigidly formal arrangement of its subordinate features, the west end would have been an effective composition. Internally, the nave arches have a bolder span, and the aisle windows are splayed more deeply than was usual in contemporary work. The roofs of both nave and aisles are flat, and divided by ribs into square panels. It was only in later years that the high pitched and open timber roof was recognised as an essential feature both for internal and external effect. |
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124 Rickman s Literary Works.
The reredos, though of a design which we should now call common-
place, is unobjectionable in proportion, and really refined in detail. The introduction of galleries in the aisles was an inevitable concession to the utilitarian spirit of the age. In dealing with them it is, however, only fair to state that Rickman left them independent of the nave arcade, and not as now intruding on it.* It would be curious to compare the cost of such a church as this
with that of one—one of many hundreds—which has been erected in our own time for a congregation of similar number. If experience has taught the modern architect anything, it ought to have taught him this, that when there is but little money to spare, it should be devoted to stability of construction, to sturdy walls, stout rafters, and efficient workmanship. Judicious proportion and a picturesque distribution of parts will always atone, and more than atone, for the absence of merely decorative features. Fifty years ago this principle was not understood. Walls were reduced to a minimum of thickness, buttresses were pared down to mere pilasters, roof timbers were starved of their just proportions, while the cost saved by this miserable economy was wasted on the loveless carving of empty niches, and redundant pinnacles, with bosses and crockets, multiplied ad nauseam. The study of ancient examples was the best remedy for such an
egregious error of judgment—an error which Rickman, by his researches rather than by his executed works, contrived to amend. In i 819 he published at Liverpool his c Attempt to Discriminate the
Styles of English Architecture'—a little book which undoubtedly did great service both in educating popular taste and in supplying to pro- fessional architects, who had by this time begun to try their 'prentice * In the churchyard of St. George, and under the shadow of the building which he
designed, Rickman himself lies buried. A canopied monument of a simple Gothic character, raised by some of his friends and admirers, marks the site of his grave, and a modest inscription, briefly referring to his aim in life, informs us that he died in 1841, aged sixty-four. |
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Rickmans 'Ancient Examples' 125
hands at Gothic, a recognised standard by which they could test to some
extent the correctness of their designs. In the compilation of its con- tents Rickman was probably indebted in some measure to the labours of his predecessors, but he was the first to turn them to practical advantage. Much had already been written on the subject of Gothic. Endless theories had been propounded as to the origin and develop- ment of style. It was reserved for Rickman to reduce the result of these researches to a systematic and compendious form, and in place of ponderous volumes and foggy speculation, to provide his readers with a cheap and useful handbook. It is a remarkable evidence of the inferior place which Mediaeval Art
still occupied in public estimation, and of the caution necessary in any departure from the much revered canons of classic taste, that Rickman should have prefaced his book with a formal description of the Five Orders. What possible connection they can have had with c English Architecture from the Conquest to the Reformation' it Is difficult to conceive, and one can only suppose that this first portion of the volume was introduced as a peace-offering to the shade of Vitruvius. The main division of periods adopted, if not originated, by Rickman
remains unaltered at the present day. The nomenclature of the various parts of a church has been but little modified. The popular error by which Norman work was still supposed to be the work of Saxon archi- tects he pointed out and refuted. In a clear and methodical manner every feature of a Mediaeval building is taken in turn and described under the head of that period with which the author deals in chrono- logical order. The peculiar characteristics of style are thus brought prominently forward and impressed upon the reader's mind. In matters of detail there are, no doubt, many points on which additional light has since been thrown. But a better system of instruction than that which Rickman employed could scarcely have been devised. The engravings which illustrate the text are few and coldly executed, but they serve their purpose. The notes appended to the volume f On Ancient |
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126 yohn Shaw's Works,
Examples of Gothic Architecture in England,' must have been most
useful at that time as an itinerary to the Architectural student. The work has since passed through several editions, enlarged and revised. ' The fruits of Rickman's labours were gradually manifested in an improvement not only of public taste but also of professional skill. It is probable that many of the then young and rising architects of the day were at least stimulated by his example, even if they did not profit by his research, in the study of Mediaeval art. Among these may be mentioned Shaw, Scoles, Salvin, and Poynter, each of whom played a part, more or less conspicuous, in the history of the Revival. Before the first quarter of the present century expired Mr. John
Shaw had made some important additions to Christ's Hospital, which, if they did not exactly revive the ancient glory of ' Grey Friars,' were by no means contemptible specimens of modern Gothic. He was sub- sequently employed to design the present hall, which is erected partly on the foundations of the ancient refectory and partly on the site of the old city wall. According to the original scheme, it had been pro- posed to convert the old hall into dormitories, but upon examination it proved to be in such a dilapidated state, that it was condemned to de- struction, and indeed a portion of it fell during the progress of the modern building, the foundation-stone of which was laid with much ceremony on April 28, 1825. The interior is of ample dimensions, being 187 feet long by 52 in width and 48 feet high. It has a ceiled roof, of which the main timbers are moulded and decorated with pendants, while the panels are rendered in plaster, coloured in imitation of oak. The hall is lighted on the south side by nine lofty mullioned windows, divided by tfansoms in the centre. It is remarkable that, although these windows are crowned with four centred arches, the minor lights between the mullions are lancet-pointed. They are filled with stained glass, chiefly heraldic in decoration. The opposite wall is panelled to a height of some twelve feet in deal, grained to look-like oak. A wood screen and organ-loft at the east end, and the visitors' gallery at the west, form |
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Christ ys Hospital. 127
picturesque features, and give a certain character to the interior, which,
though sadly deficient in refinement of detail, is on the whole efFective. The hall is vaulted underneath with flat brick arches, which, where neces- sary—as in the kitchen—are carried on monolith blocks of Dartmoor granite. Neither in the basement nor in any part of the building which is out of public sight were any pains taken to preserve a structural con- sistency of design. The Gothic of that day was, it must be confessed, little better than a respectable deception. It put a good face on its principal elevations, but left underground offices and back premises to take care of themselves. The superficial qualities of the style were imitated with more or less success, but the practical advantages of its adaptation had still to be learned and appreciated. The front towards Newgate Street may, in its- general proportions, lay
claim to architectural effect. Its open cloister, its staircase turrets, its traceried windows, and its battlemented parapet may be described as well- intentioned features in the design, which fails, as many a Gothic design of this period failed, not from a positive misuse of detail either con- structive or ornamental, but from the coarse and clumsy character of its execution. Thus the subdivision of buttresses into two equal parts by a splayed weathering introduced exactly in the centre of their height, the exaggerated projection and deep undercutting of string course mouldings, the employment of large and uniformly sized blocks of stone in the masonry of its walls, are all quite opposed to the spirit of ancient work. Considered separately these mistakes may seem of small importance to the unprofessional critic, who would, perhaps, fail to recognise them as mistakes at all. It is, nevertheless, such points as these which constitute the difference between poor and genuine work. Many an amateur has examined a modern church or group of school buildings, feeling generally dissatisfied with a result which seems—he knows not exactly why—to have missed the spirit of ancient art, while professedly aiming at its conditions. In the majority of such cases it is the details which are at fault, and these are precisely what the uninitiated |
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128 St. Katharine s Hospital.
know nothing about. To this ignorance may be attributed much of
the ill-deserved praise and unjust censure which is occasionally bestowed on the designs of modern architects by the public press. The specious attractions of a building remarkable for its size or the profusion of its ornament are loudly recognised, while thoughtful and scholarlike work, if it present itself in a modest form, is passed over as commonplace, or if it be displayed in features which are unfamiliar to a conventional taste, is voted eccentric and even ugly. In 1826 St. Katharine's Hospital was begun from the designs of
Mr. A. Poynter. The original institution was of great antiquity, and had occupied quarters in the East of London, on a site now occupied by St. Katharine's Docks. When those works were undertaken, it became necessary to remove the Hospital elsewhere, and the present group of buildings was erected in Regent's Park. In plan they are symmetrically disposed round three sides of a small quadrangle. The chapel with its large west window flanked by two lofty octagonal turrets occupies a central position, and is connected with the domestic buildings right and left of it by open screens with Tudor arches. Internally the chapel has a flat ceiled roof of oak and its walls are panelled to a height of some ten feet with the same material. Accord- ing to the fashion of the day, part of the west end of the chapel is screened off to form an entrance porch. The domestic buildings have ordinary low-pitched roofs, mullioned windows and obtuse gabled dormers. The walls are of white brick with stone dressings, the chapel being faced entirely with stone. As a design this work must be judged by the standard of its day, when rigid formality of composition was an inevitable condition of all plans, from a cottage to a palace, and when architects made a little Gothic go very far. The details of St. Katharine's Hospital were very fair for their time, and the carving, especially in some of the decorative panels, exhibits no small advance in design and workmanship. Mr. A. Salvin, another architect whose career was destined to be one
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The Works of A. Salvin. 129
of great success, and who, throughout his life, took a conspicuous part
in the Revival, came into public notice about this time. He built Moreby Hall, in Yorkshire, for Mr. Henry Preston—a house presenting no remarkable characteristics beyond the evidence which it affords of a gradual return to the manorial Gothic of old English mansions. The windows are square-headed, and are provided with double transoms as well as mullions of stone. The roofs are raised—not, indeed, to the high pitch which should properly belong to the style—but at an angle of about 450. Chimney shafts, instead of being kept out of sight or arranged in symmetrical stacks at each end of the building, are allowed to rise where they are most needed, and being designed in accordance with the rest of the work, become picturesque features in the compo- sition. Servants' offices, instead of being crowded at the back of the house (an almost inevitable condition in the Palladian villa), are planned so as to extend to the right or left in buildings of lesser height, and thus give scale to the principal front. The facility with which this kind of domestic Gothic could be
adapted to the requirements of any sort of plan, or any size of house which the owner might require, was probably a strong plea in its favour. Even those country squires and landed gentlemen who had affected a taste for classic architecture, began to ask themselves whether the dignity of a Greek portico or an Italian facade was worth the incon- venience which such features were sure to entail on the house at their rear ; whether there was not some greater advantage to be derived from the employment of a style which was not only thoroughly English in character but also permitted every possible caprice regarding the distri- bution of rooms to be freely indulged without detriment to the design. Salvin soon found ample employment for his talents, and it is but fair to add that every work executed under his superintendence shows a steady advance in his knowledge of the style which he had made his special study. Mamhead, the seat of Robert Newman, near Exeter, was begun in 1828, and occupied some years in erection. The size * k
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130 Dr. Whewell.
and importance of this mansion, no less than the skill with which, for
that day, it was designed, make it an interesting specimen of revived domestic Gothic. Scotney Castle, in Sussex, ,was erected some years later, for Mr. Edward Hussey, a gentleman of great taste as an amateur. The building derives its name from an exquisite relic of Mediasval fortified architecture still standing in the grounds. The modern mansion, for obvious reasons, did not aim at the reproduction of a fourteenth-century stronghold, but it realises many of the picturesque features of a Tudor manor-house. The internal fittings are remarkably good, and reflect great credit on the skill and ingenuity of the designer. Scoles was a pupil of Ireland, who, as a Roman Catholic architect,
was patronised by Dr. Milner—at that time vicar-apostolic of the Midland District. Ireland built several Roman Catholic Churches, one of the earliest of which was that at Hinckley, in Nottinghamshire. It is probable that for the details of these designs he was indebted to Carter's supervision. Scoles himself designed a church at St. John's Wood, which was afterwards copied at Edgbaston, near Birmingham. The churches of St. Ignatius, at Preston, and St. Peter, at Great Yarmouth, are also specimens—and by no means bad ones—of his Gothic. But his best works were executed at a later period, which our History has not yet reached. In 1832, Rickman, accompanied by his friend Whewell (afterwards
the famous master of Trinity), who had already contributed out of his vast and comprehensive store of information some valuable c notes' on German Gothic, spent some time in the north of France, and visited the chief cathedral towns in Picardy and Normandy for the purpose of architectural study. On his return, he addressed to the Society of Anti- quaries a series of letters descriptive of his tour. These were afterwards published in the f Archasologia' of the Society. It is interesting to think of the simple Quaker and his clever, shrewd-headed companion linked together by a bond of common admiration for Mediasval Art, and with the same purpose exploring the magnificent relics of ancient |
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Foreign Gothic. 131
architecture at Rouen, Abbeville, and Amiens; sketching, noting,
and measuring at Lisieux, Caen, and Coutances. Few objects out of the range of art could thus have brought into close association men of such opposite lives,, ambitions, and temperaments. The comparison which Rickman drew between the Mediaeval re-
mains in France and England have been most useful in determining the history of style and the various influences to which it has been subject. WhewelPs notes on the same journey are well known, and afford a remarkable instance of the success with which an amateur, backed by generally scientific education and encouraged by enthusiasm, may investigate and speculate on a subject for the technical details of which he has had no special training. His comparison of French and English c decorated' is all the more interesting because the study of continental Gothic has greatly increased of late years, and we have borrowed so much from our neighbours across the Channel, that there was at one time some fear of our losing all national characteristics in modern design. Happily a reaction is already taking place. That it will be uni-
versal in its effects or exclusive in its tendency need not be feared. But thoughtful men are beginning to feel that the wholesale and sudden importation of a foreign style subject, as it must be, to perversions and misadaptations by the uneducated, will work no good for the national architecture of this country. The changes which mark the progress of that art in past ages have been always gradual, and were brought about not by the whims of individual caprice, but by a concourse of events of which they became a material and lasting record. We must learn to labour and to wait. It will be time enough to think of improving on the taste of our forefathers when we have learned to realise the period of its highest perfection, and when we have identified and rejected those errors which first led to its decline. |
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132 The Pointed Arch Question,
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CHAPTER VIII.
HOSE disinterested outsiders who are content to survey the
' Battle of the Styles * from neutral ground, would be not a little surprised to find, on closer scrutiny, how much of civil warfare exists on either side. If it were merely a question of Goth against Greek, of arch against lintel, the issue might be dubious, but the cause of strife would be plain and intelligible. As it is, the partisans of Mediaeval art, at least, have been divided against them- selves by constant faction. We have been disputing for upwards of half a century as to what really constitutes the style which we desire to uphold. Its very name is still a vexed question. If, then, doubts prevail in our own day, with all the light which has been thrown on this much-discussed subject, it is not difficult to imagine the per- plexities which arose in the minds of those who, fifty years ago, in turn assumed the championship of Gothic. The theories then individually propounded, regarding the origin of the style, outnumbered in extent and diversity those which have arisen from time to time about the use of Stonehenge. Some writers ascribed the form of the Pointed arch to the intersection of round arches ; some found a prototype in the interlacing branches of trees ; others recognised in its outline the sacred Vesica ; while a fourth and more romantic kind of speculator insisted that it was but a symbol of the human hands raised upwards in an attitude of prayer ! The introduction, or development of the style in this country,
became a subject of endless controversy. Evelyn, in a previous age, had not hesitated to express his opinion that 'the Goths and Vandals, |
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Theories on the Origin of Gothic. 133
having demolished the Greek and Roman architecture, introduced in its
stead a certain fantastical and licentious manner of building, which we have since called modern, or Gothic' Wren endorsed this opinion, and there the matter rested for a while, but in the beginning of this century, various arguments were again rife. The style was Gothic ; it was Saracenic ; it had been brought to England by the crusaders ; it had been invented by the Moors in Spain ; it was an adaptation of the designs of Dioti Salvi; it might be traced to the pyramids of Egypt. One ingenious theorist endeavoured to reconcile all opinions in his comprehensive hypothesis that c the style of architecture which we call cathedral or monastic Gothic, was manifestly a corruption of the sacred architecture of the Greeks or Romans, by a mixture of the Moorish or Saracenesque, which is formed out of a combination of Egyptian, Persian, and Hindoo ! ' The labours of Milner, of Rickman, and of Whewell, helped in
their several ways to check the extravagance of these notions, and to dissipate the cloud of doubt and ignorance by which the history of Mediaeval art had been hitherto enveloped. Before their time the taste for Gothic, such as it was, and so far as the general public were con- cerned, had been but a sentiment, chiefly based on the more romantic associations of our national history, and in a few rare instances on a lingering attachment to the faith of our forefathers. The material characteristics of the style had hitherto been examined neither in an artistic nor a practical sense. Even the antiquaries had blundered in their dates and definitions. Those who would form a just estimate of the popular taste for old English Architecture, in the latter part of the last century and in the beginning of the present, need only examine any of the so-called Gothic buildings of that period to perceive the utter want of discrimination which then existed, not only regarding what may be called the unities of the style, but also regarding the use and just pro- portion of its most accentuated features. In those days a pointed arch was a pointed arch. The position of the centres from which it was |
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134 Modern Gothic Sculpture.
struck, the profile of the mouldings by which it was enriched, the
depth of wall in which it was inserted, were matters of little moment. In like manner the buttress and the pinnacle were introduced here and there, with little reference to their structural service, and with certainly no regard for their artistic form. One of the chief glories of old northern buildings, as Mr. Ruskin has justly pointed out, had been the high pitched roof. This was a feature which especially suffered in treatment during the decline of Gothic in Tudor days, when its angle was allowed to become more and more obtuse. In the earliest days of the Revival it was held of no importance whatever, and was frequently so flat as to be concealed by the parapet of the building which it covered. But in no particular was the Gothic of our grandfathers' time more
singularly deficient than in the character of its carved work and orna- mental detail. A general impression seemed to exist that although the decorative sculpture of the classic schools could be measured by some standard of taste, and was suggestive of graceful form either animate or conventional, Mediaeval sculpture on the contrary could aim at no such ideal, but was expressly suited to embody the wildest conceptions of definite ugliness. There is no more melancholy page in the history of art than that which records the wretched attempts at Gothic carving which were executed fifty or sixty years ago. Ignorance itself affords no apology for such work. Incapacity can scarcely excuse it. The bosses, the corbels, the niched figures, the gargoyles which in a thousand varying forms testified in turn the sense of beauty, the vene- ration, the love of nature and the ready wit of our ancestors, were still in existence, and might have served as models but for the egregious vanity of the day. King George's loyal subjects thought they knew better than those of King Edward. So they went to work and left us specimens of their handicraft, the like of which civilised Christendom never saw before, and it is to be devoutly trusted will never behold again. Beautiful no one expected it to be. But it also was not |
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Classification of Styles. 135
clever ; it was not interesting ; it was not life-like ; it was not humor-
ous ; it was not even ugly after a good honest fashion—it was deplor- ably and hopelessly mean. The truth is, that up to this period no one had made a special study
of the details of Gothic architecture because no one knew how to begin to study them. Professional architects, with a few exceptions, would have ridiculed the attempt. Amateurs who essayed found themselves perplexed by apparent incongruities in the style. After a careful perusal of the works of Chambers they could readily distinguish the Doric order from the Ionic order, the Ionic from the Corinthian, but when they explored our cathedrals, the gradual erection of which extended over centuries of time, an endless variety of types presented themselves in illustration of the same feature. Some columns were round; others were octagonal; others were moulded. Some arches were semicircular; others were acutely pointed; others were flat. The groined roofs and porches, the window tracery and door- mouldings, were continually differing in form, in character, and pro- portion. How much of this variety was due to caprice or individual taste, and how much to change of style ? What rules of art could be applied to such architecture, and how was the student to trace its progress and development ? A solution to these questions was at length supplied by three men in
utterly distinct positions of life, who, without acting in concert, and indeed without agreeing in points of detail, managed between them to lay the foundation for a methodical study of Mediaeval buildings. One touch of nature makes the whole world kin. One aim in art had enlisted the contemporary services of a Roman Catholic bishop, a professional Quaker, and a Cambridge don. The antiquaries and dilettanti of the day could perhaps learn but
little new from their researches, but the architects and the general public could learn a great deal, and by degrees they learned it. For the vague and, originally, contemptuous name of 'Gothic,' the'words |
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136 Rcclesiological Studies.
' Pointed Style ' were occasionally substituted. Amateurs began to
discriminate between early English, Decorated, and Tudor architecture; and the choir of Canterbury Cathedral, the nave of York, and Henry the Seventh's Chapel at Westminster, each had its admirers. Attention was for the first time called to the important and distinctive character maintained by mouldings. The design of windows was studied with more care, and it was ascertained by comparison how c plate' tracery had developed into geometrical patterns; geometrical had been beguiled into c flowing ' lines, and how the last had degenerated into c Perpen- dicular.' The various parts of a church, and the several uses to which they
were assigned, were recognised and explained. The tower, the porch, the buttress, and the parapet, all afforded evidence in their general form or decorative detail of the period when they had been designed. In- ternally the groined vault and timber roof, the choir screen and sculp- tured corbel, were examined not only for their artistic value, but as a means of proving the date of the building to which they belonged. It was gradually discovered that there was such a thing as a principle of design in Gothic, that the quaint or graceful features which distin- guished it were invented or fashioned with a purpose and were not the mere picturesque inventions of a random fancy. These researches and convictions soon led to a more scientific classifi-
cation of style than had hitherto prevailed. Milner had been brought up as all amateurs of architecture then
were, with a faith in the Orders which he could not entirely abjure. He did not indeed attempt, like Batty Langley, to modify the details of Gothic architecture, so as to conform with this division, but he gave his readers distinctly to understand that if there were three separate types of classic column and entablature with their respective members, ornaments, and proportions, so there existed among the buildings of the Middle Ages a similar and easily recognisable division into first, second, and third Pointed Styles. This division, which has long since been |
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Proprieties of Design. 137
universally adopted in the art nomenclature of this country, was of great
service in helping designers at an early period of the Revival to avoid anachronisms in the imitation of ancient work. But like all results of antiquarian research, it has had its drawbacks as well as its advantages in the development of modern taste. For years afterwards a sort of chronological propriety hampered the
inventive faculties of men. As the study of ancient examples pro- gressed, and architects became more and more accustomed to associate certain features with a certain epoch, they came to believe less in the spirit than in the letter of Gothic. They sat down to design a 1 decorated ' church, because, perhaps, the windows of that style admit- ted more light than the windows of an earlier period, but in doing so they felt compelled to adopt in their tracery the meretricious faults of the later style; they hesitated to exchange the complex mouldings and trivial foliage of the one for the bold arch-soffit and noble capitals of the other, lest their work should be called incongruous. The so-called Tudor style had many advantages for domestic buildings. It had also some artistic and constructive defects. But because architects in that age had adopted a weak form of arch, and an ugly type of dripstone, the architects of the Gothic Revival reproduced both in their new churches and manor-houses—out of pure respect for tradition. , At last it seemed necessary to find a precedent for every detail, and, to quote the humorous hyperbole uttered by a well-known member of the profession, no one was safe from critics, who knew to a nicety the orthodox coiffure of a thirteenth-century angel, and who damned a moulding that was half an hour too late. Pugin himself designed furniture which was Intended to be in keeping
with the later additions to Windsor Castle, but which he lived to pronounce a mistake. He was, however, like a true genius, always in advance of his age, and it may with truth be said, in spite of the dis- paragement which has since been passed on his works, that if he had lived to accomplish the reformation he so gallantly began, he would |
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138 Blores Early Life.
have been reckoned among the foremost architects of the present
day. There remains, however, a short period to consider before Pugin
became known to fame. In that period, many men who were either his elders, or had better opportunities than himself to establish a prac- tice, achieved a notoriety which, if less splendid, was more profitable than his own. Among these was Edward Blore, who was born towards the close of the last century. According to Britton, Mr. Blore might date his knowledge of architecture from the year 18 16, when he made an elaborate section of the east end of Winchester Cathedral. He had, however, no regular education as an architect, and was about thirty years old before he began to practise. His father was an antiquary of some note, and probably encouraged the taste for drawing which young Blore, at an early age, began to evince. The sketches of monuments, etc., which he made as a boy were carefully outlined and shaded with Indian ink. In point of accuracy they have been compared to photographs. He was apprenticed to an engraver, and rapidly made progress in the art which he afterwards turned to such good account. For some time he was actively employed as a draughtsman, and an engraver of architectural drawings. About the year 1822 the Rev. T. F. Dibdin published his l iEdes Althorpianas,' for which Blore supplied the illustrations. It was probably this accident which brought him into connection with the Spencer family, and thus formed the basis of an acquaintance which proved eminently useful to him in after life. In 1823 he made an excursion into the North of England, for the
purpose of collecting materials for a work which he brought out in parts, the whole volume being completed in 1826. It was entitled the f Monumental Remains of Noble and Eminent Persons,' comprising the sepulchral antiquities of Great Britain, with historical and biogra- phical illustrations, by the Rev. Philip Bliss, D.C.L. Mr. Blore was by this time so well known as to be made a fellow of the Society of |
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Blores 'Monumental Remains! 139
Antiquaries. All the illustrations were drawn, and many of them
engraved, by himself. Le Keux undertook the rest. In point of execution these engravings will bear comparison with any which have been published In England, before or since. They are thirty in number. The accompanying letterpress is, as the title set forth, rather a biographical sketch of the heroes whom the monuments commemo- rate, than a description of the monuments themselves. A flattering notice of the first number appeared in the c Gentleman's Magazine ' for 1824, but the critic, evidently being under the impression that both letterpress and illustrations were Mr. Blore's work, finds fault with the memoir of the Black Prince, who is represented, by a common error, to have derived his sobriquet from the colour of his armour. The ' Gentleman's Magazine' spoke with authority on such points,
for in those days it was almost the only periodical in which the arts were duly represented. It was the ' Art Journal' —the ' Building News '■—the c Notes and Queries' of its time. It registered all the metropolitan improvements—described the new churches—chronicled all the archaeological discoveries—gave the latest literary gossip of the clay, and, though it was not blind to the merits of Classic art, it steadily and faithfully recorded the progress of the Gothic Revival. The critiques on public buildings are spiritedly written, and though their phraseology betrays to modern ears an ignorance of technicalities, they are often just and discriminating in theory. In 1826 Mr. Blore was appointed surveyor to Westminster Abbey,
and shortly afterwards, in his professional capacity, discovered that the roof of the case in which the wax figures of Queen Anne, the Earl of Chatham, and the other effigies commonly known as the c ragged regi- ment ' were then placed, bore marks of ancient decoration. He had it removedj and examined it carefully. It turned out to be one of the rarest and most valuable specimens of early painting extant. Blore had a double reason for protecting it. Westminster was not then, as now, guarded by circumspect vergers, who are stimulated to additional |
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140 Blores Professional Works.
vigilance by the sixpences of the faithful. There was scarce a monu-
ment in the place which had not suffered from ruthless violence, for at that time or not long before the choristers made a playground of the venerable abbey, and the Westminster scholars played at hockey in the cloisters. In the following year Mr. Blore read a paper on the subject of his discovery before the Society of Antiquaries. About this time, through some mistake, he got the credit of having executed the exten- sive repairs of Winchester Cathedral, which, however, were carried out by Mr, Garbett, a local architect, who designed the episcopal throne there among other fittings. The design of the organ case had been entrusted to Mr. Blore in 1824. In 1827 we find the latter gentleman alluded to as c the eminent architect,' and engaged to furnish plans for the chancel fittings of Peterborough. Shortly afterwards he was em- ployed to restore Lambeth Palace, then in a state of semi-ruin. It had been three times destroyed and rebuilt. Mr. Blore found it necessary to remove some of the walls, which had literally decayed from age, but one of the principal roofs—that which now spans the dining-room—was preserved. The chamber known as Old Juxon's Hall was converted into a library, the old library having been pulled down. The c new' palace extends eastward from the tower, which joins the chapel, and is for the most part on the site of the old building. Near the hall (or new library), and over a modern gateway, was constructed a fire-proof room for the preservation of manuscripts and archives. Among Mr. Blore's other works were an Elizabethan Town Hall at
Warminster ; Goodrich Court, on the Wye, for Mr. Samuel Meyrick; Crewe Hall; Pull Court, Gloucestershire ; the Chapel of Marlborough College, Wilts; Worsley Hall, for Lord Ellesmere ; and Moreton Hall. He also designed churches at Stratford and Leytonstone, the Pitt Press at Cambridge, and additions to Merton College, Oxford. The repairs of Glasgow Cathedral were likewise carried out under his superintendence, as well as certain improvements at Windsor Castle ; and, before Sir Charles Barry was employed at Cauford (near Win- |
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bourne), the works there were entrusted to Mr. Blore. His restora-
tions at Westminster Abbey, though wanting in life and. vigour, abound in careful detail. This was, in short, his great forte. He had studied and drawn detail so long and zealously that its design came quite naturally to him, and in this respect he was incomparably superior to his contemporaries. As a typical building of the pras-Puginesque period, St. Luke's
Church at Chelsea, designed by Savage in 1824, must not be forgotten. Indeed, its cost, its size, and construction place it in the foremost rank of contemporary Gothic examples. It was raised at an outlay of 40,000/. to accommodate a congregation of 2,500 persons, and it was probably the only church of its time in which the main roof was groined through- out in stone. The plan, arranged with that rigid formality which was the fashion of the day, consists of a lofty nave with clerestory and triforium niches, north and south aisles, a western tower and narthex, and a low square vestry which projects from the east end. The general style of the design is Perpendicular, though the groining and certain details have an earlier character. The window heads are filled with tracery and enclosed within a four-centred arch of somewhat ungainly curve. The tower has octagonal turrets at each angle, which termi- nate in pinnacles of open stonework. The porch, which extends the whole width of the west front, is divided by piers and arches into five bays, of which two are on either side of the tower, while the fifth and central one is formed by the lowest story of the tower itself, vaulted over inside, and decorated externally by a cusped and crocketed canopy. Flying buttresses, to resist the thrust of the groining, span the aisles on either side, and divide them externally into a series of bays.
In examining such a structure as this, which includes in its design
every feature necessary and usual for its purpose ; which is ample in its dimensions and sound in its workmanship ; on which an excep- tionally large sum of money was expended, but which is, nevertheless, |
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142 67. Lukes Church, Chelsea.
mean and uninteresting in its general effect, it is well to put oneself in
the position of an intelligent amateur, who, feeling it to be a failure from an artistic point of view, desires to know what special faults have contributed to this result, and why, individually, they should be con- sidered faults at all. To such an enquiry, it may be briefly answered that the prominent blunders in this design are an unfortunate lack of proportion, a culpable clumsiness of detail, and a foolish, overstrained balance of parts. The want of proportion is eminently noticeable in the lanky arches
of the west porch, with their abrupt ogival hood moulding; in the buttresses, which are divided by their c set-offs' into two long and equal heights ; in the windows, which are identical in general outline throughout the church ; in the octagonal turrets of the tower, where the nine string courses occur at scrupulously regular intervals all the way up ; and, finally, in the masonry of the walls, where large blocks of stone are used in uninterrupted courses, scarcely varying in height from base to parapet. All these accidents combine not only to deprive the building of
scale, but to give it a cold and machine made look. In a far different spirit the Mediaeval designers worked. Their buttresses were stepped in unequal lengths, the set-offs becoming more frequent and more accen- tuated towards the foundation. Their string courses were introduced as leading lines in the design, and were not ruled in with the accuracy of an account book ; their windows were large or small as best befitted the requirements of internal lighting ; their walls were coursed irregularly, the smaller stones being used for broad surfaces, and the larger ones reserved for quoins and the jambs of doors and windows. It is less easy to define in words the crude vulgarity of detail
which pervades this church, but no one who examines with attention the character—if character it may be called—of the carved work, can fail to perceive the absence of vitality it exhibits in the crockets and finials which are supposed to adorn its walls. No educated stone carver |
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Formality of Design. 143
employed on decorative features would care to reproduce the actual
forms of natural vegetation for such a purpose, but in his conventional representation of such forms he would take pains to suggest the vigour and individuality of his model. Fifty years ago this principle was almost ignored. There was naturalistic carving, and there was ornamental carving; but the noble abstractive treatment which should find a middle place between them, and which was one of the glories of ancient art, had still to be revived. The third and perhaps the most flagrant fault in this building—a
fault which Savage as a designer shared with many of his contem- poraries—is the cold formality of its arrangement. It seems astonishing that one of the essential graces of Mediaeval architecture, that uneven distribution of parts which is at once necessary to convenience, and the cause of picturesque composition, should have been so studiously avoided at this time. Whether it resulted from mere want of inventive faculty in design, or from an unfortunate adherence to the grim pro- prieties of a pseudo-classic taste for which eurythmia is indispensable in places where each alley has a brother,
And half the platform just reflects the other, can scarcely be determined. But certain it is that nine-tenths of the
so-called Gothic buildings raised before Pugin's days were designed on this plan, and that an architect would no more have thought of intro- ducing a porch on the south aisle which had not its counterpart on the north, than he would have dared to wear a coat of which the right sleeve was longer than the left. There are, however, some redeeming points about St. Luke's Church,
The upper part of the tower, though foolishly over-panelled, is good in its general proportions. The same may be said of the octagonal turrets at the east end. The groining of the nave is really excellent, for its time, and is all the more remarkable, when we remember the wretched shams by which such work was then too frequently bur- |
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144 Redeeming Points.
lesqued. The reredos, though designed on a principle which would
render it unsuitable for the present requirements of church architecture, is, for its date, by no means contemptible; and as for the galleries— fatal as they are to any attempt at internal effect—and redundant as everyone but the mere utilitarian will consider them—we must remem- ber that many churches of later date, and far more pretentious in character, have maintained such features with far less excuse and under more enlightened conditions. |
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A. N. JVelby Pugin. 145
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CHAPTER IX.
OWEVER much we may be indebted to those ancient sup-
porters of Pointed Architecture who, faithfully adhering to its traditions at a period when the style fell into general dis- use, strove earnestly, and in some instances ably, to preserve its cha- racter ; whatever value in the cause we may attach to the crude and isolated examples of Gothic which belong to the eighteenth century, or to the efforts of such men as Nash and Wyatt, there can be little doubt that the revival of Mediaeval design received its chief impulse in our own day from the energy and talents of one architect whose name marks an epoch in the history of British art, which, while art exists at all, can never be forgotten. Augustus Northmore Welby Pugin was born on March 1, 1812, at
a house in Store Street, Bedford Square. His father, as is well known, had been a French refugee, who, during the horrors of the revolution in his own country, escaped to England, and obtained employment in the office of Mr. Nash, then one of the most celebrated and successful architects of his day. Nash was not slow to perceive the bent of his assistant's talents, and advised the young Frenchman to begin a series of studies illustrative of English Gothic—with a view to publication. Some of these sketches were picturesquely treated, and of sufficient merit to cause Pugin's election as a member of the old Water Colour Society, in 1808. But it was by his later and more strictly professional works that the elder Pugin first established a reputation. His ' Speci- mens of Gothic Architecture' in England and his f Antiquities of Nor- mandy ' have been already mentioned. In addition to these, he pub- L
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146 Pugin s Early Life.
lished c The Edifices of London,' in two volumes ; ' Examples of Gothic
Architecture,' quarto, 1831 ; ' Ornamental Timber Gables,' &c. Of professional practice the elder Pugin had very little, and it is
remarkable that, of his many pupils, but few have followed the profes- sion for which they were intended. There were, however, some excep- tions, among whom may be mentioned Sir James Pennethorne, late Surveyor to the Office of Works, Talbot Bury, and B. Ferrey, who was destined to become the biographer of the younger and more famous Pugin. The latter was educated at Christ's Hospital, where he showed at an early age great aptitude for learning. Even as a child, we are told, he was quick in all that he attempted, and ex- pressed his opinions with a confidence which certainly did not abate in later life. After leaving school, young Pugin entered his father's office, where the natural facility of his hand for sketching soon declared itself. He passed through the usual elementary course of study in his pro- fession, learnt perspective, and at once began to make drawings in Westminster Abbey. About the year 1825, the elder Pugin went with some of his pupils
to Paris, for the purpose of preparing a series of views illustrative of that city. His son, then a mere boy, accompanied him, and made such good use of his pencil that he was of real service to his father. In July, 1826, young Pugin and Mr. B. Ferrey visited Rochester, where they made many sketches of the Castle—the former carrying his re- searches so far as to take an accurate survey of the foundations. In the prosecution of this work he was more ardent than discreet, and twice narrowly escaped with life the consequences of his temerity. In 1827, he again accompanied his father on a professional tour in
France, and gratified his now rapidly developing taste for Mediaeval art by visiting the splendid Churches of Normandy. Up to this time his dislike to sedentary pursuits, and the dry routine of an architect's office, had prevented his entering on any practical work. The first employment which he received independent of his father appears to |
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Pugin's Theatrical Tastes, 147
have been from Messrs. Rundell and Bridge, the well-known gold-
smiths. A member of that firm, while engaged in examining some ancient designs for plate in the British Museum, had observed young Pugin copying a print from Albert Diirer, and soon became aware of his taste for Mediaeval art. The lad's services were secured forthwith, and some clever designs resulted from the commission. Shortly after- wards Messrs. Morel and Seddon, the King's upholsterers, applied to Mr. Pugin for his professional assistance in preparing drawings for the new furniture at Windsor Castle, which had been entrusted to their care, and which it was determined should partake of the ancient cha- racter of that building. This was an excellent opportunity for the display of young Pugin's abilities, and, though he afterwards frankly admitted the errors of his youthful effort, it is probable that at the time the designs were made, no better could have been procured. During the progress of the works at Windsor, Pugin formed the
acquaintance of Mr. George Dayes, a son of the artist of that name. This man occupied a humble position in the management of the scenery at Covent Garden Theatre. To a boy of fifteen who had never yet seen a play, the description of stage effects and scenery offered great attractions. At last his curiosity was gratified. He was introduced to the mysterious little, world beyond the footlights—learned the art of distemper painting, and when the new opera of f Kemlworth' was produced in 1831, and it was required to produce something like a faithful representation of Mediaeval architecture, young Pugin designed the scenes. During the period of this connection, and partly to aid him in his study of effect, he fitted up a model theatre at his father's house, where all the- tricks and appliances of the real stage were in- geniously mimicked. His tastes in this direction were but transient, and he was next
possessed by an extraordinary passion for a maritime life. To the great distress of his father he actually commanded for a short while a small merchant schooner which traded between this country and Hol- L 2
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148 Commercial Ventures.
land. In addition to the little freight, for the convoy of which
Pugin was responsible, he managed to bring over some interesting specimens of old furniture and carving from Flanders, which afterwards helped to fill his museum at Ramsgate. In one of these cruises he was wrecked on the Scotch coast near Leith—a temporary misfortune, which he had no reason to regret, for it brought him into contact with Mr. Gillespie Graham, an Edinburgh architect of some repute, who, doubtless knowing his father's name, and perceiving the ability of young Pugin, recommended him to give up his seafaring hobby and stick to his profession—a piece of sound advice, which the young man had good sense enough to follow. At this time, though many architects had adopted Mediaeval archi-
tecture in their designs, few were acquainted with Gothic detail, and young Pugin's studies in that direction thus rendered him extremely useful to many who were glad to avail themselves of his services. Not content, however, with this secondhand employment, he embarked in sundry speculations by which he undertook to supply carved work in stone and wood to those who required it for the ornamental portion of their works. But his inexperience in the varying price of labour and material soon brought him into pecuniary difficulties, and, but for the assistance of his relations, he would have been imprisoned for debt. This failure showed him the importance of adhering exclusively to the profession for which he had been educated, and to which thenceforth he turned his serious attention. That he must have realised some money by its practice is pretty evident from the fact that, while still a minor, he married in 1831 Miss Garnet, a grand niece of Dayes, the artist, who has been already mentioned. His first wife (for he married three times) unfortunately died in childbirth, and a few years afterwards Pugin built himself a house near Salisbury, in the style to which he was so much attached. It was, however, far inferior to his later works, and he had not yet learned the art of combining a picturesque exterior with the ordinary comforts of an English home. |
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Scarisbrick Hall.
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It was during his residence at St. Marie's Grange that he began to
inveigh so bitterly against the barbarisms which were still practised by the introduction of hideous pagan monuments into our noble cathedrals and churches, and which he afterwards exposed more systematically in his published works. He made a tour for the purpose of inspecting the principal examples of Mediaeval architecture in the west, and improved his taste by constant study. In the meantime he had married again. His second wife does not appear to have been pleased with his resi- dence. At all events, Pugin, who had expended upwards of 2,000/. on the house, made up his mind to sell it at a great sacrifice. It only fetched 500/. He had now a gradually increasing practice, his principal work at the time being Scarisbrick Hall, Lancashire, an interesting example of domestic Gothic, in which the lofty clock-tower forms a graceful and picturesque feature. Pugin's father and mother died in 1832-3, and by their death he
succeeded to some property which had belonged to his aunt, Miss Welby. His secession from the Church of England had meanwhile been an important event in his life. The causes which led to a change of his religious convictions, and the controversies which then arose, not only between members of the Anglican and Roman branches of the Church Catholic, but among those who belonged to the communion he embraced, have been amply discussed elsewhere. That he was sincere in his change of faith, and that it was the result of more serious considerations than those associated with the art which he practised, no one can, charitably, doubt. On the other hand, it must be admitted that the importance then attached to certain proprieties of ecclesiastical furniture and decorations has been vastly overrated on both sides. In 1836 Pugin published his celebrated £ Contrasts,' a pungent satire
on modern architecture as compared with that of the Middle Ages. The illustrations which accompanied it were drawn and etched by him- self, and afford evidence not only of great artistic power, but of a |
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150 Pugin s Literary Works.
keen sense of humour. To the circulation of this work—coloured
though it may be by a strong theological bias—we may attribute the care and jealousy with which our ancient churches and cathedrals have since been protected and kept in repair. For such a result, who would not overlook many faults, which, after all, had no worse origin than in the earnest zeal of a convert ? In 1832, Pugin had the good fortune to make the acquaintance of
the Earl of Shrewsbury, who, not only from his high rank, but from his attachment to the Church of Rome, and to Pugin's own views re- garding art, proved to him a most valuable patron. This nobleman at once employed him in the alterations and additions to his residence— Alton Towers, which subsequently led to many other commissions. The success attending Pugin's publication of the ' Contrasts ' induced
him, in 1841, to bring out his ' True Principles of Gothic Architecture,' the title of which has since passed almost into a proverb among the friends of that style. 'An Apology for the Revival of Christian Archi- tecture in England,' followed in 1843, an^ in 1844 appeared ' The Glossary of Ecclesiastical Ornament and Costume,' compiled and illustrated from ancient authorities and examples. The influence of this work, as Mr. Ferrey truly remarks, upon polychromatic decoration in our churches has been immense. Among Pugin's other literary productions are ' The present state of Ecclesiastical Architecture in England,' reprinted from the 'Dublin Review,' 1843; ( Floriated Ornament, a series of thirty-one designs,' 1849; 'Some Remarks on the Articles which have recently appeared in the " Rambler," relative to Ecclesiastical Architecture and Decoration,' 1850. In the same year he published c The Present State of Public Worship among the Roman Catholics,' by a Roman Catholic; and in 1851 appeared his 'Treatise on Chancel Screens and Rood Lofts, their antiquity, use, and symbolic signification,' a work in which certain theories were advanced that called forth much warm discussion among ecclesiologists. In 1841 Pugin left Salisbury and came to London, where he resided
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Pugifis Tour in Italy. 151
for some time at Cheyne Walk, Chelsea; but having previously pur-
chased ground at the West Cliff, Ramsgate, he not only built for himself a large and commodious house on that site, but began at his own expense a church, which advanced from time to time, as he could best spare the means from his yearly income. In 1844 he became again a widower. His wife was buried at St, Chad's, Birmingham, a church which he had himself designed. Lord Shrewsbury showed his respect and affection for Pugin by attending the funeral. This severe loss was all the more to be deplored, because Pugin had at this time reached the zenith of his professional fame. After remaining a widower for five years, he married lastly Miss Knill, a lady of good family. In 1847 he made a tour in Italy, and his antipathy to Italian Archi-
tecture was in nowise lessened by his visit to Rome, from which place he wrote home in utter disgust with St. Peter's—with the Sistine Chapel—with the Scala Regia, and most of the architectural f lions' which the ordinary traveller feels bound to admire. The Mediaeval art of North Italy, however, filled him with admiration, and confirms the general opinion that, had he lived to see the present aspect of the Gothic Revival, he would have gone with the stream in regard to the character of his design. In estimating the effect which Pugin's efforts, both as an artist and
an author, produced on the Gothic Revival, the only danger lies in the possibility of overrating their worth. The man whose name was for at least a quarter of a century a household word in every house where ancient art was loved and appreciated—who fanned into a flame the smouldering fire of ecclesiastical sentiment which had been slowly kindled in this country—whose very faith was pledged to Mediaeval tradition—such a writer and such an architect will not easily be forgotten, so long as the aesthetic principles which he advocated are recognised and maintained. But it must not be overlooked that the tone of his literary work is
biassed throughout, and to some extent weakened, first by an absolute * l 4.
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152 Character of Pugins Designs.
assumption on the part of its author that the moral and social condi-
tion of England was infinitely superior in the Middle Ages to that of the present, and secondly that a good architect ought to inaugurate his professional career by adopting the faith of the Roman Catholic Church. Such convictions as these are excusable in the mind of a zealous convert, but they have no legitimate place in the polemics of art. Again, as a practical architect, it can scarcely be said that Pugiti
always followed in the spirit of his work the principles which he was never tired of reiterating in print. If there is one characteristic more apparent than another in the buildings of our ancestors it is the ample and generous manner in which they dealt with constructive materials. But Pugin's church walls are often miserably slight, his roof timbers thin, his mouldings poor and wiry. It may be urged—and, indeed, was more than once urged by himself—that the restriction of cost had often affected to considerable disadvantage the execution of his design. To this it must be answered that stability of workmanship is a
primary condition of architectural excellence, and that in the same churches which exhibit these defects there is an unnecessary and even profuse display of ornament. The money lavished on elaborate carving in wood and stone, on painting and gilding work which had better in many instances have been left without this adventitious mode of enrichment, would often have been more advantageously spent in adding a foot to the thickness of his walls and doubling the width of his rafters. The fact is, that the very nature of Pugin's chief ability tended to lead him into many errors. Of constructive science he probably knew but little. His strength as an artist lay in the design of ornamental detail. The facility with which he invented patterns for mural diapers, and every kind of surface decoration, was extraordinary. Those deco- rative features which with many an architect are the result of thoughtful study were conceived and drawn by him with a rapidity which as- tonished his professional friends. During the erection of the Houses of |
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Pugin's Facility of Invention. 153
Parliament, and while his services were engaged to assist Mr. Barry,
he dashed off, with a ready fancy and dexterous pencil, hundreds of sketches which were frequently wanted on the spot, and at a short notice, for the guidance of workmen. Indeed, even his more important designs were remarkable for their hasty execution, and were rarely finished after the fashion of an ordinary c working drawing.' To record on paper his notion of a church tower, or the plan of a new con- vent, was with him—-if a labour at all—a labour of love.* But the production of ornament he treated as mere child's play. It is, therefore, no wonder that his artistic genius should have been
often beguiled into an elaboration of details of which his memory supplied an inexhaustible store, and which his hand was ever ready to delineate. The carver, the cabinet maker, the silversmith who sought his assistance, or whose work he was called on to superintend, might reckon with safety on the rich fertility of his inventive power, and in truth Pugin's influence on the progress of art manufacture may be described as more remarkable than his skill as an architect. For the revival of Mediaeval taste in stained glass and metal work we are indebted to his association with Messrs. Hardman. The attention which he bestowed on ecclesiastical furniture has been the means of reviving the arts of wood-carving and embroidery—of improving the public taste in the choice of carpets and paper-hangings. Those establishments which are known in London as c ecclesiastical warehouses' owe their existence and their source of profit to Pugin's exertions in the cause of rubrical propriety. His labours in that cause, and the strictures which he ventured to
utter in connection with the subject, were not confined to the Anglican community. He found much that was irregular and contrary to tradi- tion in the appointment and ceremonies of the Church which he had * Many of the etchings which he prepared for the illustration of his books were executed
when he was afloat on some yachting expedition. He was very fond of the sea, and would certainly have been a sailor if he had not been an architect. |
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154 St- Giles s Church, Cheadle.
entered, and he did his best to reform what he considered to be a
degeneracy from ancient custom, and from the true principles of design. In his essay on the c Present State of Ecclesiastical Architec- ture in England,' he lays down, with great care and minute attention to detail, the orthodox plan and internal arrangements of a Roman Catholic church. He describes the proper position and purpose of the chancel screen, rood and rood loft; the plan and number of the sedilia ; the use of the sacrarium and revestry ; the shape and furniture of the altar. These are matters upon which at the present time the clergy of neither Church would require much information; but it must be remembered that before Pugin began to write, ecclesiastical sentiment was rare, and artistic taste was rarer. The Roman Catholics had perverted the forms and ceremonies which pertained to the ancient faith. The Anglicans had almost forgotten them. But a change was at hand: a new impulse was received from an
unexpected' quarter, which turned the tide of popular interest towards these matters. Whether the cause of religion has gained or lost by this movement need not here be discussed, but that it has been advantageous on the whole to national art there can be no question. One of the most successful of Pugin's churches was that of St. Giles,
at Cheadle. The arrangement of its short compact plan, the propor- tions of its tower and spire, and the elaborate fittings and decoration of the interior, make it as attractive an example of Pugin's skill as could be quoted. Its chancel will certainly bear a favourable com- parison with that of St. Mary at Uttoxeter, or that of St. Alban, Macclesfield. Indeed, in the latter church the flat pitch of the chancel roof, and the reedy, attenuated look of the nave piers are very unsatis- factory, nor does the introduction of a clerestory (a feature which, from either choice or necessity, was omitted from many of Pugin's churches) help in any great degree to give scale and proportion to the interior. In London, the most important work which Pugin executed was the
pro-cathedral in St. George's Fields, Westminster. The fact that the |
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St. Georges Cathedral, Westminster. 155
upper portion of the tower and spire of this church has never been
completed, and the subsequent addition of buildings at the east end, not contemplated in the original design, make it difficult to judge of the exterior as a composition. But it may fairly be doubted whether, under any conditions, it would convey to the eye that sense of grandeur and dignity which one might reasonably expect from a structure of such size. In the first place, the common yellow brick used for the walls is the meanest and most uninteresting of building materials, and in London, where it is chiefly used, speedily acquires a dingy appear- ance. But independently of this drawback, there is a want of vitality about the building. The pinnacles which crown the buttresses are cold and heavy. The carved work, though executed with care and even delicacy here and there, is spiritless, except in the treatment of animal form. Crockets and ball-flower ornaments are needlessly multiplied. The tracery of the windows is correct and aims at variety ; and the doorways are arched with orthodox mouldings, but there is scarcely a single feature' in the exterior which arrests attention by the beauty of its form or the aptness of its place. Internally the nave is divided into eight bays, with an aisle on either
side, carried to nearly the same height as the nave. There is, conse- quently, no clerestory. The nave arches reach at their apex to with- in a few feet of the roof, and the great height thus given to the thinly moulded piers (unintersected as they are by any horizontal string courses, which at once lend scale and apparent strength to a shaft) is a defect which becomes apparent at first sight. The aisle walls are singularly slight for so large a church, and one looks in vain for the bold splay and deep reveal which are characteristic of old fenestration. Still there are features in the interior which reflect no small credit on
the architect when one remembers the date of its erection (1843). The double chancel screen, with its graceful arches and light tracery, though suggestive of wood-work rather than stone in design, is pic- turesque, and is effectively relieved against the dimly-lighted chancel |
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156 St. Chad's Church, Birmingham.
behind. The chancel itself was said to have been well studied from
ancient models. Architects of the present day may smile at the sim- plicity of its reredos, a row of ten narrow niches be-pinnacled, and canopied, and crocketed, each containing a small figure, flanked by two broader and higher niches of the same design, each containing a larger figure. But here again one must bear in mind that these details were designed and executed at a time when such design and such execution rose to the level of high artistic excellence beside contemporary work. Pugin had with the greatest patience trained the artisans whom he employed, and whatever may be said of the aim of their efforts, no one can doubt its refinement. We have far more accomplished architects in 1 871 than we had thirty years ago, but it may be doubted whether we have more skilful workmen. The church of St. Chad, at Birmingham, may fairly be ranked
among Pugin's most important works. In plan it presents no great peculiarity, but the sloping line of the ground on which it stands, the lofty height of its nave, the towers which flank its western front, and the sculpture with which it is enriched, combine to give a character to its exterior which is wanting in many of Pugin's churches. The general effect indicates some tendency on the part of the designer to a taste for German Gothic, without, however, any careful reproduction of its noblest features. Indeed, a glance at the details reveals at once the period of its erection—that period in which after long disuse the tradi- tions of Mediaeval art were revived in the letter rather than the spirit. Its slate-roofed spires are £ broached' at an abrupt and ungraceful angle. Its buttresses are long and lean, with c set-offs' at rare intervals, and coarsely accentuated. Its walls of brick—once red, but now toned down by time and the noxious smoke of Birmingham to dingy brown— have a mean impoverished look about them, which is scarcely redeemed by the freestone tracery of its windows, or the canopied and really cleverly-carved figures which adorn its western portal. Internally the building displays evidence of Pugin's strength and
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Stained Glass in St. Chad's. 157
weakness in an eminent degree. The chancel fittings, the rood screen
with its sacred burden, the altar tombs—in a word, the furniture of the church—are, if we accept the motive of the style in which they are designed, as correct in form as any antiquary could wish, and are wrought with marvellous refinement. But in general effect the interior is far from satisfactory. The attenuated and lanky nave piers rise to such a disproportionate height as scarcely to leave room for the arches which surmount them. The walls are thin and poor, the roof timbers slight and weak looking. There is no clerestory, and the aisle roofs follow that of the nave in one continuous slope. The aisles are more- over extraordinarily high in proportion to their width. An English poet has described to us the beauties of the c long-drawn aisle,' but here the aisles appear to have been drawn out the wrong way. The chancel is of far better proportions, and with its elaborate rood screen richly gilt and painted, its oak fittings and bishop's throne, its canopied reredos and mural decoration, isdecidedly the feature par excellence of this church.* The rest of the interior is plain, and depends for its effect on the stained glass used in the windows. Much of this glass is well designed so far as the drawing of figures and character of ornament are concerned, but it has the all-important defect which distinguished most of the glass of this period, viz.—a crude and inharmonious association of colour. This is especially noticeable in the windows of a chapel in the north aisle, where the tints used are peculiarly harsh and offensive. In no department of decorative art have the works of the Middle
Ages been until recently so hopelessly misunderstood and so cruelly burlesqued as in the design of stained glass. In the last century the inventions of Reynolds, of West, and others plainly indicate the pre- vailing belief that a painted window should be a transparent picture; * In the north aisle is an altar tomb of Caen stone with an elaborately carved ogival
canopy in the style of late decorated examples. It is cleverly designed, and executed with great refinement of detail and astonishing delicacy of workmanship. This tomb was erected in 1852. It had been previously sent to the Great Exhibition of 1851. |
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158 Character of Ancient Glass.
and when Sir Joshua filled the west end of New College Chapel at
Oxford with work of this description, he probably conceived that it was a great advance on the style of old glass—fifteenth-century glass—■- specimens of which may still be seen by its side. How far this notion was correct may be judged by any intelligent amateur who will compare the two works. The effect of Sir Joshua's window, with its simpering nymphs who have stepped on pedestals in order to personate the Virtues, is cold and lifeless, while the old glass, quaint and conventional though it may be in its abstractive treatment of natural form, glows with generous colour, which acquires double value from the fact that it is broken up into a thousand various shapes by the intersecting lines of lead as it crosses the glass at every conceivable angle. The glass stainers of Pugin's time did not indeed fall into the error
of supposing that they could treat the design of windows after the same fashion as an easel picture. But it is evident that they and their suc- cessors for years after gave less attention to the question of colour than to the drawing and grouping of their figures. The saints and angels of old glass are, it must be admitted, neither very saintly nor angelic in their action, if we are to regard them in the light of pictorial represen- tations. But we may be sure that neither the most profound hagio- logist, nor the sincerest devotee, nor the most enlightened amateur who has visited the cathedrals of York and Exeter, has regretted this fact in the very slightest degree. As well might a connoisseur of c six mark' China deplore the want of probability in every incident portrayed on a Nankin vase, or an admirer of old textile art object to the nondescript forms which pass for leaves and flowers on a Turkey carpet! The truth is that in the apparent imperfections of some arts lies the
real secret of their excellence. The superior quality of colour which long distinguished old glass from new was due in a great measure to its streakyness and irregularity of tint. In the early days of the Revival this was regarded as a defect, while the quaint and angular forms by which, in old work, the human figure was typified or suggested, rather than represented, were deemed barbarous and ungraceful. |
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Defects of Modern Glass. 159
So our enlightened art reformers of the nineteenth century set to
work to remedy these faults. They produced a glass without blemish ; their figures were drawn and shaded with academical propriety. But this was not all. It occurred to them that by using larger pieces of glass they might dispense with half the dull heavy lines of lead which meandered over the old windows. Finally, they determined that the odd-looking patches of white or slightly tinted glass which they found in ancient work should be replaced in their designs by glass as brilliant as the rest. Whatever may have been the contemporary opinion of these sup-
posed c improvements/* the modern critic can scarcely fail to regard them as thorough blunders. Every one now admits that the conditions of design in a painted
window belong to decorative, not to imitative art. It was with a wise purpose—or at least with a sound instinct, that the old craftsman* shaped those awkward heroes and graceless saints in his window— crossed their forms with abrupt black lines of lead, and left broad spaces of delicate grisaille to relieve the more positive colours of their robes. The advantage of such treatment will be best measured by those who take the trouble to compare it with the blaze of ill-associated colour and dull propriety of outline which distinguish the glass manu- factured some forty years ago. In our own time, indeed, accomplished designers like Mr. Burne Jones and Mr. Holiday have aimed at com- bining a certain abstract grace of form with beauty of colour, but the instances of such success are rare, and even when they occur it may be doubted whether such designs would not have been doubly admirable if employed for mural decoration. The Church of St. Wilfrid, in Manchester (built externally of red
* In a letter signed 'Philotechnicos/ which appears in the 'Civil Engineers'Journal' for
1837, theTollowing passage occurs :— ' Many persons have an extraordinary idea that the art of painting on glass is lost. Lost
forsooth! why|the idea is the most fallacious that ever existed; and so far is it from the fact, that the present state of excellence was never before equalled? (!) |
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160 Church of St. Wilfrid, Manchester.
brick), exhibits in the design of its nave arcade a more refined sense of
proportion than is observable in many of Pugin's larger works. Here the piers are (comparatively) short, and the arches which they support are acutely pointed. The aisle windows are narrow, and, indeed, would, no doubt, have been insufficient for light, but for those of the clerestory with which the church is provided. The rood screen—that indispen- sable feature in Pugin's churches, and one which subsequently became the subject of much controversy, is richly painted. The treatment of the altar and reredos is extremely simple, but far more dignified than the fussy elaboration of those objects in some examples of later work. One of the most interesting features in the church is the stone pulpit, which does not stand isolated, but is corbelled out from the wall on the south side of the chancel arch. One of the main objections which were raised against the revival
of Gothic for Church Architecture at this time was the additional expense which it involved when compared with the soi-disant classic style which had been so long in vogue. Pugin determined that St. Wilfrid's, which was erected in 1842, should prove, both in its design and execu- tion, the fallacy of this notion. How far he succeeded in this en- deavour may be inferred from the fact that the entire cost of the church (which will hold a congregation of about 800 persons) and of the priest's house attached to it, did not exceed 5,000/. Although Pugin was thus not unwilling to enter the lists with utilitarians in a financial sense, he strongly objected to be led by their arguments in matters which affected his artistic views. The chancel of St. Wilfrid's was found to be very dark, and some time after its erection enquiry was made of him, as the architect of the church, whether there would be any objection to intro- duce a small skylight in its roof, just behind the chancel arch, where it would be serviceable without obtruding on the design. Pugin sternly refused to sanction—even on these conciliatory terms—the adoption of any such plan, which he declared would have the effect of reducing his sanctuary to the level of a Manchester warehouse. |
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St. Marie's Church, Liverpool. 161
St. Marie's Church, Liverpool, is an early and interesting example of
Pugin's skill. It is built of local red sandstone, and displays in the mouldings of its door jambs and fashion of its window tracery consider- able refinement of detail. It has no chancel in the proper sense of the word, but the easternmost part of the nave serves for that purpose. The nave arches are acutely pointed, and their mouldings die into an octagonal block just above the impost moulding of the pier. The peculiarity of this treatment is the more remarkable when we remember the stereotyped appearance which a nave arcade of this date (1838) usually presented, and the narrow license which was then accorded to inventive taste in the design of such features. St. Marie's, in its plan as well as in the general character of its com-
position, is essentially a town church. It is now, and probably always was, surrounded by lofty warehouses of gaunt and dismal exterior, but stored inside, no doubt, with ample fruits of human labour and com- mercial industry. It is curious to turn aside from the narrow, dirty, bustling streets in which these buildings stand, and find oneself at once so suddenly and so thoroughly removed from the noise and turmoil of the outside world in this fair, quiet, modest house of prayer. It has no claim to architectural grandeur. It was built at a melancholy period of British art. Its structural features just do their duty and nothing more. The nave, which is of great length, has been left plain and un- derrated. But on the f wall-veil' and altar fittings at the east end of the church both architect and workman have lavished their utmost skill. The reredos of the high altar is extremely simple in general form but exhibits great refinement of detail. That of the Lady Chapel is most elaborate in design and workmanship. Figures, niches, canopies, pinnacles, crockets, and finials crowd into a sumptuous group—worthy of the best workmanship in the latter part of the fourteenth century. Modern critics urge with reason that that period affords by no means the best type of Mediaeval art for our imitation. The reviveoTtaste for Gothic, which in our own day at first manifested itself in a reproduction m
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162 Excess of Decoration.
of Tudor mansions and churches of the Perpendicular style, has been
gradually attracted towards earlier—and still earlier—types. But we must remember that in Pugin's time late Decorated work was still admired as the most perfect development of Pointed Architecture, and he certainly did his best to maintain its popularity. The altar and reredos in the Lady Chapel of St. Marie are real gems in their way, and may be cited as specimens not only of Pugin's thorough know- ledge of detail, but also of the success with which in a very few years he had managed to educate up to a standard of excellence, not realised during many previous generations, the art-workmen whom he entrusted to execute his designs. Whether such excessive elaboration was judicious in a town church
so dimly lighted as St. Marie's—whether it was even justifiable in a building whose structural features are certainly on no generous scale of stability, may be questioned. It has frequently been affirmed, and with some show of reason, that Pugin enriched his churches at a sacrifice of their strength—that he starved his roof-tree to gild his altar. It is only fair, however, to point out that in many instances where this apparent inconsistency has been observed, although the buildings were commenced with but slender funds, subscriptions or bequests were added just as the works approached completion, and that the architect was thus called upon to spend in mere decoration money which, if it had been available earlier, he would gladly have devoted to a worthier purpose. It is certain that in the one work which he carried out completely to
his own satisfaction, because he was in this case—to use his own words —f paymaster, architect, and builder,' there is no stint of solidity in con- struction. For that reason the church of St. Augustine, which he founded at Ramsgate, may be regarded as one of his most successful achieve- ments. Its plan, which is singularly ingenious and unconventional in arrangement, consists of a chancel about thirty-five feet long, and divided into two bays, with a Lady Chapel on its south side, a central tower and south transept only, a nave and south aisle.. The outer bay of |
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St. Augustine s, Ramsgate. 163
the south transept is divided from the rest of the church by a richly-
carved oak screen, and forms the c Pugin Chantry Chapel.' The annexed view is taken from under the tower looking south. It shows the screen of the Pugin Chantry, the arch in front of the Lady Chapel, and a portion of the rood screen. The whole church is lined internally with ashlar stone of a warm
grey colour, the woodwork of the screen, stalls, &c, being of dark oak. The general tone of the interior, lighted as it is by stained glass windows (executed by Hardman, and very fair for their time), is most agreeable and wonderfully suggestive of old work. The roofs of the chancel, Lady Chapel, and transept are panelled ; those of the nave and aisles are open timbered, but all are executed in oak. The altars and font are of Caen stone, richly sculptured. On them, as well as on the rood screen and choir stalls, Pugin has bestowed that careful study of detail for which, in his time, he stood unrivalled.* The exterior of the church is simple but picturesque in outline. As a composition it can scarcely be considered complete in its present state, seeing that Pugin intended to carry up the tower a storey higher than it is at present, and to roof it with a slate spire.f The walls are of cut flint, with string-courses and dressings of dark yellow stone. No student or lover of old English Architecture can examine this interesting little church without perceiving the thoughtful, earnest care with which it has been designed and executed, down to the minutest detail. It is evident that Pugin strove to invest the building with local traditions of style. This is shown in its general arrangement, the single transept and other peculiarities of plan being characteristic of Kent. * A lofty wooden canopy over the font was exhibited in the Mediaeval Court of the
Crystal Palace in 1851 and attracted much attention. f It seems a great pity that this feature, which would add so much to the external
appearance of the church, should be left unfinished nearly twenty years after Pugin's death. Surely some of the numerous art manufacturers who profited so largely by Pugin's genius might.now subscribe between them the small sum (probably about 500/.) required for this purpose, and thus do honour to his memory by completing his favourite work. |
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Church of St. Augustine, Ramsgate.
The late A. IV. Pugni, Architect, 1842.
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164 Ptigin House at Ramsgate.
Close to the west end of St. Augustine's Church is Pugin's house,
externally a very simple and unpretending brick building with a square embattled tower of no great height, a steep roof, and mullioned windows. The internal plan is one which no doubt was convenient and pleasing to Pugin himself, but which would hardly meet the modern requirements of an ordinary home. The principal entrance (from a paved courtyard at the back of the house) opens at once on a hall which is carried up to the entire height of the building. Two sides of this hall are occupied by a staircase ; the other two, wooden galleries are bracketed out, and give access to the bedrooms above. This is a picturesque arrangement, but open to objection, inasmuch as it would appear impossible for inmates to pass from one reception room to another, or to reach the rooms above, without coming within sight of the entrance door. The drawing rooms (on the right of the hall) are fitted with carved stone mantel-pieces and panelled ceilings of mahogany—a wood which Pugin seems to have liked very much—the centre of each panel being painted with some conventional ornament. The dining room, which is opposite the entrance doorway, is a well
proportioned apartment, depending chiefly on panelled work for its decoration. Here may be seen some of the quaint furniture which Pugin so cleverly and readily designed. The walls are papered with the armorial bearings of the Pugin family—a black martlet with the motto f En avant.' The windows throughout the house are fitted with casements, the modern sash being among the owner's peculiar aversions. Plate glass was permitted in those windows which command a sea view, but small t quarried' glazing is chiefly adopted for the others.* Attached to the house is a small but well-proportioned private
chapel, the interior of which is very effective in design. * In Scarisbrick Hall, when Pugin was employed as architect, the leadwork of the
windows in front of the house was gilded. The effect, as may be supposed, is very rich and beautiful. |
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Pugms other Works. 165
The list of Pugin's works is a long one, including churches, besides
those already mentioned, at Derby, Kenilworth, Cambridge, Stockton- on-Tees, Newcastle-on-Tyne, Preston, Rugby, Northampton, Ponte- fract, Nottingham, Woolwich, and a host of other places. Bilton Grange, erected for Captain W. Hibbert, Warwick; Lord Dun- raven's seat at Adare, in Ireland (since remodelled by Mr. P. C. Hard- wick), Scarisbrick Hall, St. John's Hospital, Alton, and the restora- tion at Chirk Castle, Denbighshire, may be mentioned among his works in domestic architecture. But notwithstanding the size and importance of some of these buildings, it must be confessed that in his house and the church^at Ramsgate one recognises more thorough and genuine examples of Pugin's genius and strongly marked predilections for Mediaeval architecture than elsewhere. With one great national un- dertaking, indeed, his name has been intimately associated. But this marks so important a stage in the history of the Gothic Revival, that it must be reserved for another chapter. |
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166 The late Sir Charles Barry.
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CHAPTER X.
HE development of modern art in most countries may be
generally assigned to one and sometimes in succession to each of three causes : individual genius, public sentiment, and State patronage. We have seen that the two first were not wanting in England to promote the cause of Gothic architecture. An event was now at hand which helped to secure for it the last, and in its day the most important impetus. The incidents which attended the selection of Mr. Charles Barry's design for the Houses of Parliament are among the most interesting in the history of the Revival. His earliest efforts in the direction of Mediaeval design were creditable for their time, but by no means extraordinary. As a student he had given little or no attention to the style. In his first Continental tour he had turned aside from the magnificent west front of Rouen Cathedral to sketch a modern classic church. In Paris, Notre-Dame and the Sainte Chapelle had but small attractions for him. But the Italian palaces filled him with genuine admiration and afforded models for his imitation in many a London club-house and private English mansion, whose merits having been fully acknowledged and 4 described elsewhere it will be unnecessary to mention in these pages, further than by remarking that they contributed for some years, and indeed still tend, to divide public taste on the question of national style—at least so far as the modern buildings of this metropolis are concerned. It is curious, however, that the first works of any importance
entrusted to him were two churches—one at Prestwich and the other |
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Barry s early Works. 167
at Campfield, Manchester. They were designed in a style which no
doubt at the time (1822) passed for very satisfactory Gothic, though in after life he looked back with no small amusement at these early efforts. St. Peter's Church, Brighton—the commission for which he gained in competition soon after—was a more important building, and though far from realising the genuine spirit of Mediaeval archi- tecture was probably not surpassed by any contemporary architect— Rickman alone excepted. In 1826 he was employed by the Rev. D. Wilson, Rector of Islington,* to design three churches: one at Holloway, another at Ball's Pond, and another in Cloudesley Square. It would be fruitless to enter upon any description of these and many other similar structures which, under the general name of Gothic, were erected in England about this time. In spite of the large sums which in many instances were spent on their execution, it can scarcely be denied that they fail to realise in any important degree even the general forms—still less the decorative details of ancient work. The cause of this deficiency must not be ascribed to mere ignorance. It is true that up to this time the buildings of the Middle Ages had been but imperfectly studied. But a man of Barry's zeal and artistic ability might soon have overcome this obstacle. The venerable parish churches of England were open to his inspection, and would have served him for models as excellent in their way as the palaces of Florence and of Venice, which, by the aid of his dexterous pencil, as with a magic wand, he had summoned to Pall Mall. The truth is he did not imitate the ancient types of Ecclesiastical Architecture, partly because he had not studied them, but chiefly because he did not care to do so. In the interesting Life of Sir Charles which has recently been published, his opinions on this point are clearly and definitely expressed:— He himself felt strongly that the forms of Mediaeval art, beautiful as they are,
do not always adapt themselves thoroughly to the needs of a service which is |
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* Afterwards Bishop of Calcutta.
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168 Barry s Views of Church Architecture.
essentially one of c Common Prayer,' Deep chancels, high rood screens, and (in
less degree) pillared aisles, seemed to him to belong to the worship andinstitutions of the past rather than the present. Time-honoured as they were, he would have in some degree put them aside, and accepting Gothic as the style for Church Architecture he would have preferred those forms of it which secured uninter- rupted space, and gave a perfect sense of unity in the congregation, even at the cost of sacrificing features beautiful in themselves, and perhaps of interfering with the * dim religious light' of impressiveness and solemnity. It is probable that these views would find but little favour among
professional admirers of Gothic at the present day, and by some indeed they would be accounted as flat heresy. But when Barry was a young man ecclesiastical sentiment was at a discount. Those extreme forms of ceremonial in public worship, which, whether rightly or wrongly, are described as a revival of ancient Anglican usage, were almost unknown and were certainly unadopted. Forty years ago a cross on the gable of a church or on the back of a prayer-book would have seemed like rank popery in the eyes of many^honest folks who have lived to see the English Communion Service gradually assimilated to the Roman "Mass. But if Barry had little sympathy with the revival of Church
Architecture modelled on Mediaeval plans, he certainly deserves credit for the attention which, in spite of his Italian proclivities, he gave to the study of domestic Gothic. His design for King Edward VI.'s School at Birmingham exhibits a remarkable advance in the knowledge of that late development of the style which is generally described as Perpendicular' work, and it may safely be assumed that at the time the building was commenced (1833) no contemporary architect could have achieved a more satisfactory result. Those who examine the facade towards High Street (and the conditions of the site were such as to admit only of a street front) cannot fail to recognise many peculiarities of detail which were afterwards reproduced in the Houses of Parliament. And this fact may be especially |
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Destruction of the Old Houses of Parliament. 169
recommended to the attention of critics who have ventured to question
the authorship of the latter design with which his name has been chiefly- associated. It was on the night of October 16, 1834, that Mr. Barry, as we are
informed by his biographer, was returning to London on the Brighton coach, when a red glare of light illumining the horizon warned him of that memorable fire which caused the destruction of the old Palace of Westminster, and was the indirect means of raising him to fame and fortune. The history of the professional competition in which this able and industrious architect won the great prize of his life, has been in one form or another frequently narrated, and is probably familiar to all who take an interest in the fact itself or in the various circumstances by which it is surrounded. That the rapidly developing taste for ancient English architecture had by this time assumed a national and definite character may be assumed from the fact that a Parliamentary Committee, in drawing up the terms of the competition, stipulated that the design for the new buildings should be either Gothic or Elizabethan. This condition, indeed, left a wide range of choice open to the com- petitors. Pointed architecture had passed through many distinct phases of style from the time of the Plantagenets to that of the Tudor line. There was the Early English type, with its dignified simplicity of outline, its noble conventionalism of sculptured forms, its stout bold buttresses, and pure arch contour. There was the Fourteenth Century type, with its maturer development of decorative features, its foliated window tracery, its enriched mouldings, its elaborate niches and canopies. And, thirdly, there was the Perpendicular type which, deficient in many of the characteristic graces of its predecessors, debased in general form, vulgarised in ornamental detail, and de- generate in constructive principles, still retained enough of the old traditional element of design to justify its title to nationality. But whatever may have been the standard of taste in days when King's College Chapel was regarded as the crowning glory of Gothic, it |
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170 The House of Parliament Competition.
requires no great discernment on the part of modern critics to perceive
both in the Tudor and in the Elizabethan styles abundant evidences of a fallen art. Roman Doric is not more essentially inferior to Greek Doric : the age of Valerian does not exhibit a greater decline from the age of Augustus : the school of Carlo Dolce is not further removed from the School of Mantegna : than English architecture in the days of the last Henry ranks below that in the reign of the first Edward. It is perhaps not surprising that in the earliest period of the Revival,
professional designers should have sought their inspiration among those examples of Pointed work which were—so to speak—freshest from the hands of the mason, and therefore more complete and more numerous than earlier specimens. To take up the thread of traditional art where it had been dropped was, if not the wisest, at least the most obvious and the most natural course. But the clue, if it was to lead to excel- lence, could only lead in one direction, and that was backwards. Un- fortunately this fact was not at first perceived. With a few rare exceptions, all architects interested in the Revival devoted themselves to the study of Perpendicular work, and there their devotion ended. The designs of Reginald Bray and John Hylmer were preferred to those of Bertram of Salisbury and Eversolt of St. Albans. Bath Abbey and St. George's Chapel, Windsor, were considered finer things in their way than Lincoln Cathedral or the choir of Canterbury. It was while public taste in England remained under such delusions
as these that the competition for the New Houses of Parliament was announced. Into that competition ninety-seven candidates entered. The total number of drawings prepared was fourteen hundred. The Committee of the House of Lords had previously decided that not more than five designs, and not less than three, should be submitted to the King for approval. The author of the first in order of merit was to receive an award of 1,500/., and unless there were grave reasons to the contrary, was to be appointed architect to the new buildings. The rest were to be recompensed by a prize of 500/. each. The |
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Barry s Design Selected, 171
Commissioners selected four designs : first, that of Mr. Charles Barry ;
second, that of Mr, John Chessel Buckler ; third, that of Mr. David Hamilton (of Glasgow); and, fourth, that of Mr. E. Kempthorne. That this decision was followed by some dissatisfaction among the out- siders may be, as a matter of course, assumed. The time and labour required for the preparation of the drawings were considerable, and could scarcely have been spent to no purpose without creating a strong disposition to chagrin among the unsuccessful. But, on the whole, a good feeling prevailed. A meeting of the competitors was held at the * Thatched House Tavern,' and a resolution was passed declaring that, in the opinion of those present, the competition had been f alike honourable and beneficial to the architects of this country,' and expressing a belief that the Commissioners had made, their selection with f ability, judgment, and impartiality.' The resolution concluded by recommending a public exhibition of all the designs submitted. In course of time this suggestion was carried out, and was attended
by a very good result. Hundreds of amateurs, who had had no patience to wade through antiquarian discourses on the origin of the Pointed arch, and to weigh the merits of Mediaeval art, saw for the first time, side by side, the designs of men who had made that art, with more or Jess success, their study. They heard them compared, criticised, and in turn lauded or condemned. And. the criticism of that day was certainly more in advance of professional skill than is the criticism of the present day. We have indeed more accomplished designers now than then, but public opinion on such subjects is neither so readily offered nor comparatively so valuable as it once was. To those who had thought seriously on the terms of the competition,
the words f Gothic or Elizabethan' seemed somewhat unsatisfactory. Britton, in a paper read before the Institute of British Architects (then just established), protested against them as undefined. c Elizabethan,' he urged, might mean anything from Tudor to Renaissance. His |
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172 The Unsuccessful Designs.
objections, as it turned out, were not without foundation. Some of
the competitors actually submitted Italian designs. The majority of them, however, complied with the spirit as well as the letter of their instructions, and prepared designs which were at least in aim either Gothic or Elizabethan. As might have been anticipated, the knowledge of either style dis-
played was in many cases not profound. One candidate proposed as the central feature of his design an enormous octagonal dome, apparently magnified from one of the turrets of Henry VII.'s Chapel, which was to be supported by flying buttresses of gigantic size. Another described his invention as c an example of the pure English of Edward III.'s time.' In reality it was an exaggerated medley of features, almost ex- clusively ecclesiastical in character, and borrowed from the cathedrals of England. The west front of York Minster was (after decapitation) in- troduced in the group. Exeter, Lincoln, and Canterbury, were laid under contribution. St. Stephen's Chapel was not only preserved, but reproduced in duplicate at the opposite angle of Westminster Hall, in order to give uniformity to the composition. A third design was likened at the time to a union workhouse, and
was only redeemed from the charge of being commonplace by bring- ing Westminster Abbey into the perspective view, and raising over its crux a central spire, to which the chief objection was that it could never have been erected. A fourth was described as a sort of Brobdignag church, with a transept in the centre, and octagonal towers at the extremities. But perhaps the most original idea was that of a gentle- man who had devised as the leading feature in his design a colossal circular tower, on which c statues of monarchs and patriots, flying buttresses, pinnacles, and pierced windows, raise up in regular gradations a vast and ornamental object, distinguishable from all parts of the metropolis, about the size of the Castel St. Angelo in Rome.' Extravagances of this kind were, it is needless to say, avoided by
those who took the foremost rank in the award. The especial merit |
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St. Stephen's Chapel. 173
of Buckler's design*—second only to that of Barry in the opinion of the
judges—was that it avoided the multiplication of detail and of those features which are more rightly employed in ecclesiastical than in domestic or palatial types of Gothic. He adopted what was then familiarly known as a pyramidal line for the general effect of his composition, the central feature of which was a lofty tower with angle turrets. In this design, St. Stephen's Chapel, restored, formed a conspicuous object. The plan in general arrangement was considered picturesque, and, so far as the relative position of the two Houses was concerned, convenient. Mr. Buckler obtained credit for the purity of his ornamental details, which, if they exhibited no striking originality of design, were at least well selected. Among the outsiders whose plans found favour may be mentioned Rhind, who had apparently borrowed his details from the architecture of Hatfield; and Salvin, whose towers were suggestive of Heriot's Hospital. Opinions were divided as to what proportion of the ancient buildings should be preserved. Many of the competitors desired to retain St. Stephen's Chapel. Cottingham exhibited a model for its restoration. Wyatt and Goodridge were for lengthening it. Some considered that the Painted Chamber might still be kept intact; while a few still more conservative admirers of Mediaeval art proposed that every vestige of the old Palace which was not abso- lutely in a ruinous state should be repaired and incorporated with the new structure. Barry, as a practical man, took a middle course. He had found
St. Stephen's Chapel not exactly in ruins, but in such a condition that its preservation was impossible, while to restore it with anything like accuracy would have been a hazardous undertaking. Such, at least, was the opinion of Sir R. Smirke, of Wilkins, of Laing, and other con- temporary architects of repute, who were consulted on the subject. From this opinion Cottingham and Savage differed. But those gentle- men had been competitors, and no doubt felt pledged to the views which, in that capacity, they had maintained. The idea of restoring |
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174 Westminster Hall.
the chapel was abandoned, but the crypt, part of which had been
degraded to the uses of a scullery, was preserved.* The case of Westminster Hall was different. Any scheme which
had failed to provide for the retention of this venerable structure- intimately associated as it is with many an incident in our national his- tory—would have been at once rejected, not only by the Govern- ment, but by public opinion. Even the common rabble of the town, when they assembled on the banks of the Thames to watch the pro- gress of the fire which destroyed the old buildings, had raised a cry of genuine dismay when for a short while the roof of the Hall appeared in danger. To save it from the flames was perhaps an easier task than to settle how to deal with it afterwards. Left in its original con- dition, it would have been an interesting relic of antiquity, but it would have been useless and even inconvenient in its relation to the plan of the new buildings. On the other hand, to disturb its integrity for the sake of modern improvements and mere notions of convenience seemed little short of sacrilege. It was reserved for Barry's ingenuity to devise a plan which satisfied—as far as they could be reasonably satisfied—these opposite considerations of utility and antiquarian conservatism. He determined to make Westminster Hall the main public entrance
to the New Palace, and for this purpose he recommended l that a hand- some porch with a flight of steps should be added to the south end of the Hall, from which the approach should be continued' through St, Stephen's Hall (proposed to be erected on the site of St. Stephen's Chapel) into a central lobby of great size, and lighted by an octagonal lantern midway between the two Houses, and in immediate connection with the public lobbies attached to each, and with the Committee Rooms. The practical effect of this arrangement was to add some twenty or thirty feet to the length of the Hall. It has been argued that this interfered * The restoration of this interesting relic of Mediaeval art was subsequently carried out
by Mr. E. M. Barry, R.A., the well-known architect, and a son of Sir Charles. |
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Ingenuity of Barry's Plan. 175
with the proportions of the interior as originally designed, and it may
have been on that ground that Barry at one time proposed to raise to a greater height the roof itself. This suggestion was, however, never carried out, and indeed the present aspect of the Hall is such as may well satisfy the most fastidious critic, when it is remembered with what practical difficulties and conflicting opinions the scheme for its alteration was beset. The site itself was by no means an easy one to deal with, and many
a plea might have been raised on artistic grounds for erecting the New Palace in a more elevated and commanding site in the metropolis. But historical associations presented an overwhelming argument in favour of that part of Westminster which was in the immediate neigh- bourhood of the great Hall and the Abbey, and it was an argument which happily prevailed. If anything could reconcile to this decision those who considered mere architectural effect of paramount import- ance, it was the opportunity given for a noble river front to the New Palace. Barry at once saw the necessity of securing this feature in his design. He recommended that the building should be kept close to the Thames, and only separated from it by a terrace, the line of which was to be as nearly as possible at right angles to Westminster Bridge. Such a facade^ it was true, would not be exactly parallel to Westminster Hall, and this must affect the position of the grand corridor which led from the south end of the Hall to the central vestibule. But by making the latter octagonal in plan, and by altering the line of embank- ment, this discrepancy was reduced to a minimum, and in execution is scarcely noticeable.* The result was an elevation which, if we accept the aim of its design, is eminently successful in effect. Many a critic, in pointing out the faults of the building as a whole, has admitted the excellence of its river front. * A reference to the plan of the new Houses of Parliament, published in the inter-
esting Life of Sir Charles Barry by his son, Dr. Barry, will best explain the ingenuity of this arrangement. |
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176 Opposition to Barry's Scheme.
Before the building was actually begun, Barry had to encounter two
distinct kinds of opposition to his scheme. There were those who objected on various grounds to the employment of Gothic altogether. There were those who objected on antiquarian grounds to the particular type of Gothic which he selected, and to his mode of dealing with the old buildings. The best answer which could be given to the latter class of opponents was simply this, that whatever defects might be perceived, whether in the nature of his scheme or the quality of his art, no one, in an open competition, had on the whole surpassed him. It was easy to talk of restoring St. Stephen's Chapel and the Painted Chamber, of leaving Westminster Hall absolutely intact and of preserving every relic of the ancient palace. The question really came to be how far these proposals were compatible with the main object in view, viz. the design of the New Houses of Parliament, in which convenience of plan was a first necessity. That there might have been found among the com- petitors men whose knowledge of Gothic detail was more advanced than his own is probable. But no one had so successfully united that knowledge with the practical requirements of the case. The arguments which were brought to bear against the adoption of
Gothic altogether as the style of the new buildings seemed plausible to the ignorant or prejudiced, but were to a great extent founded in error, and were certainly ill-timed. Protests of such a kind should have been made__not after the result of the competition, but when its conditions
were first announced. That which attracted most notice at the time
was embodied in letters addressed by Mr. W. R. Hamilton to the Earl of Elgin in 1836-37. Hamilton was a scholar and a dilettante^ but his literary tastes and his antiquarian researches had been turned in one direction only. He saw in classic art an expression of intellectual refinement and of ideal beauty, compared with which the science and the exuberant fancy of the Mediasval architect and sculptor were as things of nought. He regarded the temples of Greece and Rome as the noblest achievements of human invention. He associated |
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Mr. Hamilton's Letters.
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177
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the monuments of the Middle Ages with ideas of gloom, of supersti-
tion and barbarous extravagance. Whole volumes might be written to prove that he was right and to prove that he was wrong. To the end of time men will probably be divided in opinion as to whether the Parthenon or Chartres Cathedral represents the more exalted phase of architectural taste, or gratifies the purer sense of mental pleasure. The real question at issue was whether Gothic should or should not be adopted for the New Houses of Parliament. Hamilton brought the whole force of his scholarship and literary ability to prove' that the adoption of Gothic would be a mistake. His letters developed into essays, which would have been more interesting if they had been less prolix in matter and less diffuse in style. He quoted Pindar, he quoted Cicero, he quoted Aristotle, he quoted Plutarch, he quoted Plato. He quoted Bacon, Hume, Winckelman, Hallam, Coleridge, Fresnoy, and Sir James Mackintosh. That the sentiments of each and all of these eminent authors, in their several ways, and at different periods of the world's history, have been a source of pleasure or instruction to mankind no one will deny, but that their opinions could have much influence in determining the style of the New Palace of Westminster may be doubted. Mr. Hamilton's arguments, like those of many an able pleader,
occasionally proved too much. Thus, in his first letter he says: It is notorious to all who have attended to the history of Architecture, that
every age and every country have progressively formed to themselves each its own peculiar style and character, and, excluding from the question those cases where there may have been a self-evident decline from good to bad, from the beautiful to the deformed, from simplicity to meretricious ornament, from culti- vated to barbarous periods, it seems right that each age and each country ought to hold fast to that style which, whether foreign or indigenous, circumstances and improved knowledge have introduced into general practice. It is difficult "to see how the force of this reasoning can be admitted
without coming to a conclusion that Italian architecture ought never N
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178 Mr. Hamiltoi^s Arguments.
to have been introduced into this country at all ; that Englishmen
ought to have held fast to their Tudor, which, in the fifteenth century, was a thoroughly national style, and certainly superior to that by which it was at first replaced. Mr. Hamilton pointed out with truth that, at the time he wrote, the
larger portion of public buildings erected in Great Britain during the past half century had been of a classic character ; but when he went on to say that this was due to f the good sense of the British public,' which f could not be borne down by the fancies of individuals,' he must have been laughing in his sleeve. It would be curious to specu- late to what depth of absurdity and degradation the condition of national art might in course of time descend in this country but for the influence of private taste and individual genius. A fair evidence of the architectural effects which have been secured by the good sense of the British public, when completely unfettered, may be noticed in Gower Street and in Russell Square. It seems to have been assumed by Mr. Hamilton and other anti-
Gothic critics of his day, that because pictorial art had made but little advance in England during the Middle Ages, the efforts of modern painters would have been incompatible with the conditions of Mediaeval Architecture. If this were really so, the best hope to express would have been, not for the extinction of Gothic, but for the rise of better painters. The Padua Chapel sufficed for Giotto; the Orvieto Ca- thedral for Luca Signorelli; the Gothic palaces at Siena and Venice for Spinello and Tintoret. It might well have been urged that if the artists who were to be employed on the decoration of the Houses of Parliament approached the old Italian masters in excellence there would be no great reason for complaint. The arguments which Mr. Hamilton endeavoured to base upon
a quasi-religious ground, were such as could scarcely impose upon the most bigoted Puritan of his time. It is of course open to any writer to comment on the licentious vagaries and irreverent shapes of Mediaeval sculpture, but when he proceeds to remark that our ancient |
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Anti-Mediceval Prejudices. 179
churches and cathedrals were built to give the mass of the people a false
impression of religious awe, and to instil a respect and terror for those who presided in them, he ought to remember that both charges cannot be well maintained side by side. It is impossible to inspire respect by licentiousness, or religious awe by irreverence. No one can be openly profane and pretend to piety at one and the same time. The truth is that these Mediaeval folks were neither quite so bad nor quite so good as modern critics by turn would have us believe. The ecclesiastic of the Dark Ages has been frequently portrayed as an ill-favoured fanatic, with a countenance in which evil passions are scarcely masked by hypocrisy, and with a pocketful of indulgences, which he is ready to grant for the commission of any crime that is well paid for. Or he is described as an angel in sackcloth—a model of wisdom, of self-denial, of benevolence, and of purity. The knight-errant of romance is either a lawless marauder, eager for spoil and reckless of every principle of morality ; or he is a gallant gentleman, who derives his sole means of livelihood from the pleasant, but scarcely profitable, occupation of rescuing damsels in distress. Fallacies of a like kind are promulgated by those who have en-
deavoured to prove on the one hand that art in the Middle Ages was wilfully turned to superstitious and even vicious purposes, and on the other that every missal painter and sculptor of saintly effigies was himself a saint. The bigotry of the first presumption is only equalled by the folly of
the second. It would be manifestly unfair to measure by a modern standard of refinement the rude expression of humour, or the coarse symbolisms of vice and its punishments, which found embodiment in Mediaeval Art. Every one knows that many a joke which passed current in polite society three centuries ago, would scarcely bear repetition among modern schoolboys ; yet it by no means follows that the dames and cavaliers of Queen Elizabeth's Court were less virtuous than our modern world of fashion. |
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180 Pseudo-Moral Objections.
On the other hand, to presume that what may be called the religious
aspect of ancient art resulted from the specially religious life of those who practised it, is a piece of sentimentalism which is founded neither in philosophy nor in fact. If experience teaches us anything on such a point, it teaches us that constant familiarity with the material adjuncts of an outward form of faith is likely to beget, not an increase, but rather a diminution of reverence for such objects. It is probable that, except in a few rare instances, the monks who sat down to illuminate a breviary, and the sculptors who were engaged in the carving of a reredos, regarded their work with the interest of skilful craftsmen rather than with the enthusiasm of earnest devotees. In modern days we have unconsciously drawn a distinction between re- ligious art and popular art. In the Middle Ages they were thoroughly blended, so that while the incidents of sacred history frequently found illustration in the decorative features of domestic architecture, the details of carved work in many a church and cathedral exhibit a mere expression of humour, and humour of not always the most elevated kind. A considerable portion of Mr. Hamilton's letters is occupied by the
utterance of sentiments in the truth of which the world has been long agreed. That Greek Architecture is grand and simple in its general character; that the invention of printing opened the mind of man; that we have not yet succeeded in rivalling the sculpture of Phidias; that genius may be occasionally led astray by public taste; and that the principles of good art, when more understood, will present a more enlightened standard, are as true as that Shakespeare was a great poet, or that gunpowder was unknown to the ancient Britons. But the assertion of such abstract propositions, even expressed as they were in unexceptionable English, and amplified by endless illustrations from the classics, did not throw much new light on the question as to what style pf design was best suited for the Houses of Parliament. Stripped of rhetoric, of dissertations on the age of Pericles, and prejudiced de- nunciations of Medievalism, Mr. Hamilton's arguments merely went to |
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Colonel yacksoris Reply. 181
prove this: that he had an artistic taste of his own, and that the Govern-
ment as well as the nation were bound to follow it. On the score of convenience he adduced scarcely a single reason for the rejection of Gothic which might not have been applied with equal force to the rejection of Greek architecture, presuming that the latter had been adopted in all the primitive severity of its present type.* The fact is that neither style could be adopted without considerable departure from ancient precedent, and, if both must undergo the modification necessary for modern requirements, it was surely more reasonable to modify and accept a style, once at least eminently national in its characteristics, than to revert to one which belonged neither to the age nor to the country for which it was proposed. It was one of Hamilton's arguments that the revival of Gothic for
the New Houses of Parliament would confound time and usages. On this point Colonel Jackson, who published a pamphlet in reply, very sensibly expressed himself: I think time is less confounded by constructing an edifice in a style of nearly
similar date with the institution of the assembly for whose purpose it is intended, than by building it in any other style. At all events, it must be allowed that, adapting to a British House of Parliament, under the Christian reign of William IV., the style of architecture adopted in heathen Greece in the time of Pericles, some twenty-three centuries before, is a much greater confounding of time than any which can result from the employment of Gothic. As to usages that will be confounded by a Gothic House of Parliament, I am not aware that any precise usage has ever obtained in these matters : they have generally de- pended upon the fashion of the times or the taste of the reigning prince. If, however, anything like constancy has ever prevailed in this country, it has unquestionably been in favour of Gothic Architecture. It would be fruitless to review the countless arguments which were put
forward, on both sides of this much-vexed question, in pamphlets, maga- * That this was what Mr. Hamilton really desired is apparent from his second letter.
The adoption of Italian Architecture was a compromise which he might have tolerated, but would never have approved. |
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182 Commencement of the Work.
zine articles, and letters to the public press, before the Houses of Parlia-
ment were actually begun. Those arguments have been since renewed from time to time, under different circumstances, and in a variety of forms, with more or less enthusiasm. For upwards of a quarter of century, the Battle of the Styles was carried on, and, if it has ceased at the present day to rage with its old violence, it is probably because the weapons used in that prolonged warfare have become blunted and worn out. Everything that could be said in favour or disparagement of Gothic has been said. Mutual concessions have since been made; old pre- judices have disappeared; misunderstandings have been cleared up; but the event which first raised the controversy into national importance was undoubtedly the decision that Gothic should be adopted for the Palace of Westminster. The first stone of the new building (after the river-wall and founda-
tion had been completed) was laid, without ceremony, on April 27, 1840.* The practical and constructive difficulties which Barry had to encounter at the outset of his work were great, but they sank into in- significance compared with the annoyances to which, in his professional capacity, he was subjected from a variety of causes—some no doubt in- separable from the external management of so great an undertaking, but others that might well have been avoided. These, however, were in time met, and in a great measure dispelled, by the tact and ability which formed part of Barry's character, and which contributed so largely to his success. From the original design as submitted in competition, several im-
portant alterations were made. The Victoria Tower was reduced in the dimensions of its plan, but carried to a far greater height than had at first been intended. The roof of the House of Lords was raised. The Central Hall—in consequence of the conditions proposed by * Such is the date given in the ' Life of Sir Charles Barry.' But according to the ' Civil
Engineers' and Architects' Journal' the first stone was kid on March 5, 1839. Possibly this was for some portion of the substructure. |
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Character of Barry's Design. 183
Dr. Reid, for a scheme of ventilation (afterwards abandoned)—was
lowered. The House of Commons was again and again remodelled in the endeavour to effect a compromise between requirements based in turn upon considerations of convenience, acoustic principles, and architectural effect. The extraordinary increase which, during the pro- gress of the building, occurred in the business of Parliamentary Com- mittees, necessitated considerable modifications. All these facts ought to be remembered in estimating the effect of a design whose execution extended over a far longer period of time than was originally contem- plated, and must have been subject to a number of internal influences, of which the public take small account, but which no architect would find it possible to disregard. Much of the artistic criticism which was passed on Barry's design at
first, and during the progress of the building, was undoubtedly just. The strong tendency to long unbroken horizontal lines in com-
position, was the natural fault of an architect the bent of whose taste was confessedly in favour of the Italian School. c Tudor details on a classic body !' Pugin is said to have exclaimed to a friend as they passed down the river in a steamboat. And unfortunately the Tudor details were needlessly multiplied. There are general principles of taste which may be safely accepted independently of the question of style, and among these is that one which requires for elaborate ornament a proportionate area of blank wall-space. Barry utterly ignored, and possibly disputed, this principle. As the eye wanders over every com- partment of every front in this building, it seeks in vain for a quiet rest- ing-place. Panels moulded and cusped—carved work in high and low relief—niches statued and canopied—pinnacles bossed and crocketed— spandrelled window-heads—battlemented parapets—fretted turrets, and enriched string-courses—succeed each other with the endless iteration of a recurring decimal. It is hardly too much to say that, if half the decorative features of this building had been omitted, its general effect would have been enhanced in a twofold degree. One of the |
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184 Effect on the Revival.
peculiar failings exhibited by Gothic architects of the day seems to
have been the incapacity to regulate the character of design by the scale on which it was to be applied. The extraordinary size of the Victoria Tower required in its general outline and surface decoration a very different treatment from that of the building which lay at its base. In this case, Barry contented himself with magnifying small features into large ones. The result has proved to be that while the tower individually loses in apparent grandeur by reason of its elaborated detail, when seen in connection with the main body of the building, it has the unfortunate effect of dwarfing the proportions of the latter by reason of its own overwhelming bulk. In spite of these and other defects which critics have not failed to
point out (without considering the long lapse of time that ensued between the first conception of Barry's design and the completion of his work), it must be admitted that, taken as a whole, the Palace of Westminster was eminently creditable to its author, and probably equal, if not superior, to any structure which might have been devised and carried out in the same style and under similar conditions by the most skilful of his competitors. Thirty years have made a vast difference in the professional study of Mediaeval Architecture, and in public appreciation of its merits. Qualities of design which were once con- sidered essential to artistic grace are now ignored and even condemned, while the so-called faults which the last generation of architects strove to avoid have risen to the level of confessed excellence. It is easy to say that if these Houses of Parliament had been begun
in 1865 instead of 1835, * nobler type of Gothic would have been adopted in the design. Who knows how far the taste for Medieval Art might have been developed at all but for this timely patronage of the State ? Is it not rather true that the decision of the Government as to the style of the new buildings gave an impulse to the Revival which could have been created in no other way—an impulse that has ■kept this country advanced before others in the earnestness with |
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Influence on Art Manufacture. 185
which ancient types of national Architecture are studied and imitated by
professional men ? * In the department of Art Manufacture it would be impossible to
overrate the influence brought to bear upon decorative sculpture, upon ceramic decoration, ornamental metal-work, and glass staining, by the encouragement given to those arts during the progress of the works at Westminster. In the design of such details Pugin's aid was, at the time, invaluable. It was frankly sought and freely rendered. Hardman's painted windows and brass fittings, Minton's encaustic tiles, and Crace's mural decoration, bear evidence of his skill and industry.j* They may be rivalled and surpassed in design and execution at the present day ; but to Pugin, and to the architect who had the good sense to secure his services, we shall ever be indebted for the rapid advance made in these several departments of Art during the first half of the present century. Nor must we overlook the important step gained in connection with
this work by the appointment of a Fine Arts Commission in 1841. To assert that the statues and paintings which now decorate the Houses of Parliament are all that could be desired in point of style or ex- ecution, would be very far from the truth. But before they were undertaken, no public encouragement worth mentioning had for some time past been given either to painters or sculptors. They were now associated in the completion of a grand national work. The Pictorial Art Competition, and display of prize cartoons in Westminster Hall, had the effect of bringing under public notice the talents of many an artist who might otherwise have long remained in obscurity. The technical details of fresco painting, which for centuries had been for- * In the literature of the Gothic Revival we are, however, far behind the French. No
work has been produced in England which can compare, in amount of research and use- fulness, with M. Viollet le Due's admirable ' Dictionnaire Raisonnee.' t For the execution of the decorative sculpture, Mr. Thomas (acting of course under
the direction of Sir Charles Barry) was alone responsible, and probably at the time no one was better qualified to undertake it. |
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186 The Modern Gothic School.
gotten in this country, received scientific attention; and if the issue has
not been altogether satisfactory, it is from no want of pains or extent of research. If it be argued that these results could have been equally attained by
the adoption of any other style of architecture for the Houses of Parliament, the answer is that no other style would have served so well to preserve—at least in aim—the unities of a School of Art. Before the commencement of this work, many public buildings were erected in the pseudo-Greek and revived Italian fashion of the day, but the accessories with which they were invested had by long sufferance been allowed to remain deficient in the character and consonance of design. The Classic Renaissance, even in its palmy days, had failed to
inspire that sort of uniformity which should mark the return to a former style of art. Fashionable portrait-painters who in the seven- teenth century had depicted their royal patron as a Roman warrior in a full-bottomed wig, were not more inconsistent than many a con- temporary architect, who suffered the most incongruous modernisms to intrude in the interior and fittings of a palace which was professedly classic in taste. In the Houses of Parliament it was Barry's endeavour to maintain,
down to the minutest article of furniture, the proprieties of that style which the voice of the nation had selected for his design. How carefully and thoroughly he did this, the work itself testifies in every detail. It may not belong to the highest class of art. But, of its kind, it is genuine, well studied, and complete. |
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Revival of Church Architecture. 187
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CHAPTER XL
HILE the adoption of Mediaeval design for civic, and thus
indirectly for domestic, buildings was encouraged by the decision of Government that the New Houses of Parliament should be Gothic, the revival of ancient Church Architecture received a fresh and no less powerful impetus from the rapidly increasing taste for ecclesiology, which had by this time begun to develop itself in Eng- land. The origin of this taste may be traced to two causes. First to the necessity of providing additional churches of some kind—a necessity which had been already recognised by the State—and, secondly, to that remarkable change which was gradually taking place in the religious convictions of English Churchmen, and which resulted in a movement known under various names at different periods of its progress, but really representing a tendency to invest the Church with higher spiritual functions, and to secure for it a more symbolical and imposing form of worship than had for many generations past been claimed or maintained. So early as 1818 an Act of Parliament had been passed for building and promoting the building of additional churches, and a Royal Com- mission had been appointed for carrying the Act into execution. The Reports issued by this Commission during some twenty or thirty years after their appointment afford curious statistics as to the gradual change in architectural taste. In the tabulated statement of the first Report (1821), it was not even considered necessary to name the style of the new churches in course of erection. In later Reports this deficiency is supplied, and f Gothic with Tower and Spire * is found alternately with c Roman of the Tuscan Order,' or * Grecian Doric with Cupola.' The |
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188 The ' Incorporated Society!
western and northern counties seem to have been the first to return to
the ancient type, but in London and the east of England the classic element still predominated. For some years York and Lancashire dis- tanced other provinces in the number of their new churches, and for their steady adhesion to a style of design which can only be called c Mediaeval' because it can be called nothing else. With a few notable exceptions, some of which have been mentioned, these build- ings were erected at small expense, and therefore were not designed with any aim at architectural effect. The walls were as slight as struc- tural safety would permit. The roofs were of low pitch and ceiled internally. The porches were small and meagre. As for the chancel —a feature now considered almost indispensable to every village church —it was either omitted altogether or reduced to the condition of a shallow recess, just large enough to contain the communion table. The great object was to secure as many sittings as possible, consistently with the maintenance of that thoroughly modern institution, the family pew. And here religious zeal clashed with notions of personal comfort. For the high-backed, luxuriously cushioned and carpeted pew occupied of necessity a great deal of room, and, on the other hand, to sit on uncovered wooden benches as congregations do now in half the modern churches of London—to make, in short, no distinction between the rich and poor assembled in common worship—would have been considered something altogether incompatible with the requirements of a genteel congregation. In this dilemma it was obvious that the only expedient by which a certain number of sittings could be obtained without doubling the size and cost of the church was the erection of galleries, and these were freely adopted, without the slightest reference either to ancient precedent or to architectural effect. The suggestions published about this time of the Incorporated
Society for Promoting the Enlargement, Building, and Repairing of Churches and Chapels, plainly indicate the spirit in which such works were then undertaken. Durability and convenience were the qualities |
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' Commissioners Churches! 189
mainly insisted on. The site was to be central, dry, and sufficiently
distant from factories and noisy thoroughfares; a paved open area was to be made round the church. If vaulted underneath, the crypt was to be made available for the reception of coals or the parish fire-engine. Every care was to be taken to render chimneys safe from fire, but side by side with this excellent counsel was a suggestion that they might be concealed in pinnacles ! The windows, it was naively remarked, £ ought not to resemble modern sashes; but whether Grecian or Gothic the glass should be in small panes and not costly.' The most favourable position for the.c minister ' was stated to be cnear an end wall, or in a semicircular recess under a half-dome.' It was indeed stipulated that the pulpit should not intercept a view of the altar, but the sine qua non was that all the seats should be placed so as to face the preacher. Pillars of cast iron were recommended for supporting the gallery of a chapel, though it was hinted that c in large churches they might want grandeur.' Ornament was to be c neat and simple,' yet c venerable' in character. The Society even went so far as to recommend Gothic ; but in order to satisfy another .class of taste, it was added thatc the Grecian Doric is also eligible.' Such were the structures which, under the half contemptuous name
of c Commissioners' Churches,' began to spring up in various districts throughout England in the second and third decades of the present century. Within a dozen years after the Act had been passed, one hundred and thirty-four had been completed, and fifty more were in course of erection. In Birmingham, Liverpool, Manchester, and Leeds, in Stockport, Sheffield, Leicester, Bolton, and Huddersfield, besides a host of smaller towns, may still be found examples—and, in some cases, many examples—of this phase of the Revival. They possess, as a rule, little or no merit in the way of architectural design, having been chiefly built for the sole purpose of providing as speedily and as cheaply as possible church accommodation for manufacturing districts, which of late years were rapidly increasing in population. Had the church |
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190 'Evangelical' Scruples.
building movement been confined to this object and to such districts,
spiritual instruction of a certain kind might indeed have been secured where it. was obviously necessary, but much of the zeal and interest which has since been awakened among laymen would have been lost, while Architecture as an art would have suffered to an incalculable extent. Concurrently, however, with this public and praiseworthy endeavour
to build what may at least be called houses of prayer, a strong desire began to manifest itself in this country for a return not only to the ancient type of national church, but to a more decent and attractive form of service. The tendency of religious thought in England, after combatting the scepticism of the seventeenth century, and rallying from the indolence of the Hanoverian period, had drifted almost unconsciously into that condition of doctrine which is commonly named, or as some think misnamed, c Evangelical.' That in their time and in their own way the followers of this school
did excellent work in the Church has since been admitted by all who are not prejudiced to the extent of bigotry. But whatever may have been their claim to Evangelical functions in a spiritual sense, they certainly brought no good message to the cause of Art. The sym- bolism, the ceremonies, the sacred imagery, the decorative adjuncts of a material church, they regarded not only with indifference, but with pious horror. No service could be too simple, no chapel could be too plain, no priest too unsacerdotal for the exigencies of their creed. To what purpose, they asked, had the Reformers worked and suffered if we were to revive in the nineteenth century the ecclesiastical architecture, the idolatrous gewgaws, the superstitious forms and ceremonies which had prevailed in the Middle Ages ? Whether a congregation of Christians assembled for public worship in a cathedral or a barn their prayers would be equally acceptable. The best form for a church, they reasoned, was surely that which was the simplest—in which all could see the preacher and hear his words. For the plan, a mere |
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Utilitarian Objections. 191
parallelogram would suffice. The chancel, with its Popish rood screen,
its credence table and sedilia, was but a relic of the Dark Ages, and totally unsuited to the requirements of a Protestant community. Crosses, whether on the reredos or the gable-top, were to be avoided as objects of superstitious reverence. Ornamental carved work, decorative painting, encaustic tiles, and stained glass were foolish vanities which lead the heart astray. The very name of the altar was a scandal and a stumbling-block to the right-minded. Such were some of the objections raised against a revival of Ancient
Church Architecture by those who conceived that they recognised in it a source of immediate danger to the Reformed faith. But there were others whose arguments took a more practical form. In their opinion, a refined type of structure and ecclesiastical decoration was to be avoided, not so much because it might be spiritually dangerous, but because it was decidedly expensive. For the cost of one stone church with a groined roof, or even an open timbered roof, two might be built in brick with plaster ceilings ; and who could dare to say that worship in the plainer building would be less devout or sincere than that which was offered in the other ? Apologists were not wanting for this economical scheme of church
extension—a scheme which combined in its purpose the distinct but not opposed virtues of benevolence and frugality, and which thus awakened the consciences while it guarded the pockets of the faith- ful. A notable little book was published for the express purpose of showing for what small sums of money some modern churches had, and others might be, built. The designs were indeed not of that order of taste which would have commended itself to the Wykehams and the Waynfletes of past ages, or to the Streets and Butterfields of our own day. But, on the other hand, the most jealous critic would have frankly pronounced them free from any semblance of superstitious symbolism—from those artistic attractions in which one section at least of the religious public saw at that time a pitfall |
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192 Ecclesiastical Economy.
and a snare. They were, in short, very Protestant, and what was then
equally important, they were very cheap. The ingenious author took a pride in carrying his suggestions into matters of detail. He narrated how in one church a neat portable font had been purchased for the sum of 14.J. This did not indeed include the price of a pedestal, but when required for use it might be placed on the communion table, in which position he (a clergyman in the Church of England) recommended that it might be used for the service of baptism. Again it was sheer extra- vagance to employ gold or silver for the sacramental plate, when a perfectly serviceable chalice, salver, and flagon (of Britannia metal) could be bought in Sheffield for 3/. 19J. The economy thus suggested was, no doubt, a well-purposed economy.
Money saved in such a manner might have been applied to many excellent purposes, and among others to that of parochial relief. But it is impossible to contemplate the intention without calling to mind another instance of benevolent thrift, proposed and authoritatively rebuked in the earliest history of Christianity—when, to do honour to her Master, the woman of Bethany broke her box of precious ointment, and the people murmured at its cost. There is a sanguine maxim in physics, as in every-day philosophy,
that when things are at their worst we may hope for amendment. To what contemptible level the utilitarian spirit which prevailed some forty years ago might have dragged the Church of England it is difficult to say, if a strong and steady influence had not been exercised in an opposite direction. English antiquarians, as we have seen, had laboured to maintain the traditions of Mediaeval Art at a time when popular taste had declared for an exotic style of Architecture. The time had now come when that taste was on the wane. The most im- portant public building yet raised in modern England was being erected, at the suggestion of Government, after a Gothic fashion, at least In details. The revival of a still earlier style of design for our churches was due to the ecclesiological interest and researches which were the result of a reaction from previous apathy and ignorant prejudice. |
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Secular Apathy. 193
Just as the decision of the Synod of Dort had, in the seventeenth
century, indirectly helped to encourage Arminian doctrines under the Stuarts, so the intolerant Puritanism that prevailed in this country half a century ago by degrees engendered an ecclesiastical sentiment, the character of which was half artistic and half doctrinal. Of course there was a large body of c outsiders ' to whom points
of taste and points of doctrine were matters of equal indifference. Against them the chief charge which could be brought—and it is a sufficiently grave one—was this : that they had allowed church fabrics to fall into decay, and church services to lapse into slovenliness. The modern generation, with its trim village churches carefully repaired, decently appointed, and bedecked with flowers on festivals; or its town churches, rich in marble, in tapestries and decorative painting, with a daily service all the year round, and a full choir every Sunday—the orthodox modern church-building geneiation can form but little notion of the carelessness, the irreverence and ignorance which prevailed in regard to matters ecclesiastical half a century ago. Children were allowed to grow up utterly uninformed as to the nature and signifi- cance of the English Liturgy and the Sacraments. Baptism was a mere ceremony frequently performed—in polite life—under the parental roof. Confirmation was in most cases dispensed with altogether. Many an undergraduate learnt for the first time at his University the difference between Lent and Advent. The observance of Saints' Days was confined to the denizens of the Cathedral close and to a few fanatics beyond it. In country districts a bad road or a rainy day sufficed to keep half
the congregation away, even from Sunday services. Of those who attended, two-thirds left the responses to the parish clerk. The rest carefully repeated the Exhortation and Absolution after the clergyman. Cracked fiddles and grunting violoncellos frequently supplied the place of the church organ. The village choir—of male and female per- formers—assembled in the western gallery. When they began to sing, o
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194 Condition of Church Service.
the whole congregation faced about to look at them; but to turn
towards the east during the recitation of the Creed, or to rise when the clergy entered the church, would have been considered an instance of abject superstition. No one thought of kneeling during the longer prayers. Sometimes the Litany was interrupted by thwacks from the beadle's cane, as it descended on the shoulders of parish schoolboys, who devoted themselves to clandestine amusement during that portion of the service. When the sermon began, all, except the very devout, settled themselves comfortably to sleep. The parson preached in a black gown, and not unfrequently read the Communion Service from his pulpit. Cathedral services were celebrated with a little more decorum, but with
scarcely less apathy. The buildings themselves, from being neglected altogether, were now preserved by shutting out the people. The author of c The Broad Stone of Honour,' writing in 1824, thus speaks of their condition: What would have been the feelings of Johnson if he had lived to see a
cathedral in England closed upon Sundays, with the exception of a small part of the choir; the nave and the great body of the building converted to all intents and purposes into a museum, to afford amusement to the curious and emolu- ment to the vergers ; and an order recognised and established which decreed that they should never be entered as a place of worship and for the purpose of devotion ? Yet such is the regulation which now exists in the interior of the most celebrated of our ecclesiastical structures. It is melancholy to think that many of the abuses thus recognised
and deplored should still linger in our system of Cathedral economy ; that the elements of beadledom and vergerism should yet remain to be eradicated from the ecclesiastical polity of many a Chapter in the United Kingdom. But, on the other hand, a great change has since taken place in the mode and management of ordinary Church services. The study of ecclesiology, of Mediaeval Architecture, of sacred music, and of rubrical usages, has by degrees transformed a conventional and |
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The Cambridge Camden Society, 195
sometimes scarcely reverent ceremony into a picturesque and interesting
rite. Various influences combined to originate this change. It is not, however, too much to say that they would have been practically value- less but for the exertions and combined action of certain Churchmen, who, when the cause which they had at heart was still unpopular and misunderstood, strove zealously and disinterestedly to teach and main- tain its fundamental principles. For some years previous to the period which our History has now
reached, there existed an c Architectural Society' at the University of Oxford, and an.' Antiquarian Society ' at Cambridge; but the former only timidly and the latter only incidentally engaged in those re- searches which were afterwards called ecclesiological. In 1839 two undergraduates of Trinity College at the latter University conceived the idea of founding a Society for the Study of Church Architecture in connection with ritual arrangements. One of these young men was Mr. (afterwards the Rev.) J. M. Neale, now dead, whose name as an author is well known. The other, Mr. Benjamin Webb, is the present in- cumbent of St. Andrew's Church, Wells Street. They communicated their proposal to their college tutor, the Rev. T. Thorp (now Arch- deacon of Bristol), who received it favourably, and after some discussion the Cambridge Camden Society was formed. Their corporate name was perhaps not very well chosen. It was intended to commemorate that of the famous antiquary, but it had already been adopted by a literary Society in London. Mr. Thorp became the first president. Several senior members of
the University gave the Society a condescending rather than zealous support; but as time went on they cautiously withdrew their patronage, with one exception. This was Dr. Mill, the Regius Professor of Hebrew, who from first to last remained true to the cause. At first the Camden had naturally to depend on the exertions of young men—the under- graduates and B.A.'s of Cambridge. Among its earliest members were many who have been since distinguished in life. One (Mr. H. Goodwin) 0 2
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196 Publication of the (Ecclesiologtst!
became Dean of Ely, and is now Bishop of Carlisle ; another (Mr, P,
Freeman) is the present Archdeacon of Exeter ; a third (Mr. J. S. Howson) was in time preferred to the Deanery of Chester; a fourth (Mr. E. Venables) obtained a stall at Lincoln. To this list the names of F. A. Paley, a distinguished scholar, and S. N. Stokes, now an in- spector of schools, must be added, and lastly, though by no means least, that of Mr. Beresford Hope, M.P., who, by his taste, his zeal, and his liberality, has perhaps done more to promote the revival of Mediaeval Church Architecture than any layman in our time. By degrees the Society systematised its efforts and fell into efficient
working order. It held general meetings : it delegated special commit- tees. It held periodical (field days,' when the principal churches in the neighbourhood were visited, and every remarkable feature in their design became the subject of discussion and research. It published a series of pamphlets, among which Neale's c Few Words to Church- wardens' attracted much attention, and laid the foundation for a thorough reform, then sorely needed, in the care and management of ancient ecclesiastical structures. This brochure went through several editions, enlarged and adapted to certain special requirements, and was followed by the c History of Pews/ an ingenious, exhaustive, and scholarlike little treatise. At length, in 1841, the Society founded a magazine of its own. This was no other than the f Ecclesiologist,' which has since taken its place in the art literature of its day, but the very name of which was at that time a novelty, a'nd to some an enigma. On May 9, 1840, the Committee of the Cambridge Camden Society
issued their first annual Report—not without satisfaction to themselves, as may be inferred from the fact that within the space of twelve months the number of members enrolled had increased from eight to one hundred and eighty. Four distinct methods were recommended, by which the aim of the Society might be fulfilled. First, the restora- tion of mutilated architectural remains; secondly, the description of all churches visited; thirdly, the execution of drawings illustrative of |
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General Objects of the Society. 197
ecclesiastical architecture; and, fourthly, the collection of brass-rubbings.
Patience, zeal, and scrupulous care were insisted on as virtues indis- pensable to the antiquary, and while a modest Q balance in hand ' testified the prudence of financial administration, promoters of the good cause were urged to contribute to its resources with a liberal hand. A systematic plan was devised for obtaining necessary information
as to the original design and modern condition of ancient churches throughout the kingdom. Blank forms were printed and issued to members of the Society, suggesting, under several heads, the details required for description. These forms were rapidly filled up and returned. In course of time they formed a stock of ecclesiological lore, which has since become most useful not only to amateurs, but to pro- fessed students of Mediaeval Art. Of course the objects which the Society kept in view and plainly
announced could not long be dissociated from questions of doctrine among the clergy and congregations to whom it especially directed its appeal. In some quarters the movement in favour of church resto- ration and ancient rubrical usage excited distrust and even repugnance. It was the peculiar merit of Mr. Neale's pamphlets to unite, in the advice which they contained, the zeal of an enthusiastic Churchman, the knowledge of a skilled antiquary, and that cautious tact which was essential in an endeavour to enlist the sympathies of the general public, without offending prejudices rooted sometimes in religious principle and more frequently in sheer ignorance. No one who attends church at all, and still less the churchwardens,
on whom the care of the sacred building itself should devolve, can venture to dispute the proposition that it is as much the duty of a parish to preserve its church in decent condition as it is the duty of the civic authorities to keep a town hall in good order, or of a house- holder to maintain the stability and cleanliness of his dwelling. Yet it was a patent fact thirty years ago that many a church, both in town |
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198 Neales ' Hints to Churchwardens!
and country, had fallen into shameful and even dangerous neglect.
This was the first point to which Mr. Neale drew urgent attention. Why, he asked, while private houses were kept clean and comfortable, should the House of God be suffered to decay or be patched up in a manner which would disgrace the poorest cottage whose inmates could afford its repair ? With what conscience could the country squire leave his spruce and well-appointed mansion to attend Divine service in a building where the windows were broken or boarded over, the walls mouldy with damp, the rotting roof rudely plastered out of sight, the floor ill-paved, the ancient decorative features replaced by the meanest substitutes ? These are questions which, if needed at all in the present day, would
find an obvious and ready answer. But there was a time, and within the memory of many Churchmen, when they seemed to take the general public by surprise. Many of Mr. Neale's suggestions towards a much- needed reform were of a practical kind. He detailed the best means of preserving churches from damp, of keeping them clean and well ventilated. But he also went on to describe what many of his readers must have learned from him for the first time, viz.: the plan and purpose of an ancient parish church, the uses of its several parts, the significance and symbolism of its internal arrangement. To this he added many excellent hints on the subject of restoration and refitting of naves and chancels. The subject of rubrical reform was cautiously approached, and the author endeavoured to give weight to his sugges- tions by appealing to the piety and good sense of intelligent laymen rather than by any direct reference to questions of doctrine. The first number of the c Ecclesiologist' * appeared in November
1841, and its publication was hailed as an important step in the revival of Church Architecture. Its primary object was to keep those members * It is to be observed that the words ' Ecclesiology ' and ' Ecclesiologist,' though now
commonly adopted, were originally invented and first used by the Cambridge Camden Society. |
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Opposition to the Camden Society. 199
of the Cambridge Camden Society who resided at a distance from the
University regularly informed as to the Society's transactions. But it was also proposed to conduct the magazine in such a manner as to afford means of inter-communication on the subjects of church building, restorations, and antiquarian lore. Its pages were to be open to all enquirers on points of architectural taste, rubrical propriety, or disputed ecclesiastical usages. By these means it was hoped to establish a bond of union between the Cambridge Camden, and Oxford, and other Archi- tectural Societies, and to maintain a common field of labour in which the clergy, professed architects, and zealous amateurs might work together with the advantage of mutual assistance. The whole career of the Society at Cambridge was an eventful and
exciting one. Inaugurated by a small coterie of college friends, it rapidly extended its relations in all parts of the kingdom. It received patronage and support from some of the highest dignitaries of the English Church. Beneficed clergy, University dons, distinguished laymen in every condition of life, wealthy amateurs, as well as many an architect and artist of note, were enrolled among its members. With many of these the principles of reform, whether aesthetic or ecclesiastical, which it advocated, were extremely popular. But by many outsiders they were regarded with suspicion and positive dislike. Among the latter, Mr. Close (the present Dean of Carlisle) proved a determined though not very formidable antagonist. His famous c Fifth of November' sermon was confessedly an attack on the Society. It was preached in the parish church, Cheltenham, and was afterwards pub- lished under a preposterous title which, no doubt, the reverend author has long since wished to forget.* Unanimity did not always prevail among members of the Society itself,
especially when questions of doctrine were involved in the official censor- ship which its acting committee occasionally assumed. The first num- ber of the c Ecclesiologist' contained a somewhat severe criticism on a * * The Restoration of Churches is the Restoration of Popery,' &c> |
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Restoration of the Temple Church.
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200
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church then recently erected at New Town, Cambridge. Some of the
University dons took alarm at what no doubt they conceived to be a sacrifice of Protestant principles to antiquarian orthodoxy. They drew up and addressed to the committee a remonstrance, in which they expressed a fear that there existed c in some quarters a desire to convert the Society into an engine of polemic theology instead of an instrument for promoting the study and practice of Ecclesiastical Architecture.' This remonstrance met with a conciliatory reply. The first number of the magazine was republished, and the article was remodelled in such a manner as to avoid cause of offence. As a rule the notices of new churches and of restorations published by the Society were doubly valuable, inasmuch as they not only conveyed intelligence of such works to the amateur, but by degrees established a standard of architectural taste and propriety in the planning and arrangement of churches to which even professional designers paid deference. The restoration of the Temple Church, one of the first events chron-
icled in the pages of the c Ecclesiologist,' was certainly an important one at this stage of the Revival. That pure and beautiful specimen of Early English Architecture, sharing a common fate with many other relics of mediaeval art, had suffered severely from neglect and modern innovations. Its chancel was blocked out from the nave. The nave was filled with pews which rivalled a jury box in size. The walls were wainscoted. The floor was raised by an accumulation of rubbish to a height of some feet above its original level. A hideous altar screen rich in pagan symbols, and a pulpit such as Gulliver might have sat under if he had attended Divine Service in Brobdignag, had been erected. The mural decorations of the interior had been allowed to perish or were obscured by monumental tablets of execrable taste. How far the Templars themselves were individually or collectively responsible for this desecration it is impossible to say. But a day arrived when they awoke to a sense of shame and to a memory of those early archi- tectural traditions which had once been associated with their Order. It |
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The Ecclesiological Society. 201
was decided that the Temple Church should be restored. The work
necessarily extended over many years, and more than one architect was employed in its supervision. It would of course be invidious to com- pare the earlier portion of the repairs executed with the later and more scholarlike renovations by Mr. St. Aubyn. At the present day when half the cathedrals of England are undergoing similar treatment after the advantage of a whole generation of ecclesiological study it would be surprising indeed if any obvious mistake were made in reproducing the original design. But considering that this work was begun thirty years ago, the world of art may be thankful for the general success with which it has been carried out. It is to be noted that although the Cambridge Camden Society
reckoned among its members many architects of high repute, whose advice and assistance were always available, and freely rendered, it selected its working committee entirely from amateurs. By this rule, which from first to last was strictly maintained, the infringement of professional etiquette was avoided. The committee was for years charged with all the active functions of
the Society; but as time went on and many of its members left the University, it became obvious that the local c Camden' must either remove to London or be dissolved. Luckily the former course was adopted, and in 1846 it took the name of the f Ecclesiological (late Cambridge Camden) Society.' * With this change its special connection with the University ceased, and it elected on its committee amateurs distinguished for their architectural and antiquarian taste, whether Cam- bridge men or not. Among those who took a prominent position in the Society during its second phase, and in addition to its earlier mem- bers, were Sir Stephen Glynne, Sir C. Anderson, Mr. F. H. Dickinson (late M.P.), Messrs. J. D. Chambers, J. F. France, T. Gambier Parry (whose name, as well as that of his colleague the late H. S. Le Strange, has been since most notably associated with the theory and practice of * The words * late Cambridge Camden ' were afterwards dropped.
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202 Dr. Chandler.
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decorative art), the Rev. G. H. Hodson, the Rev. T. Helmore, and
the Rev. G. Williams. The meeting at which it was decided that the Society should change
its name was held in the school-room of Dr. Chandler, the Dean of Chichester, who by this time had joined the Society, and was one of its most zealous supporters. The encouragement which this dignitary, a representative of the old school of English High Church clergy, gave to the Revival of Church Architecture deserves notice. By opening his cathedral—as no cathedral had been previously opened—to the erection of memorial windows, he created a new and valuable impulse to the art of glass-painting. The architectural restoration of the building he entrusted to the late Mr. R. C. Carpenter, whose name stands foremost among professional designers for his accurate knowledge of ancient work, his inventive power, and his refined treatment of decorative details. Through Dr. Chandler's exertions a new church (from Car- penter's design) was built at Chichester, and he afterwards became the founder of St. Andrew's, Wells Street—the first church erected under Peel's Act, and the earliest district church in London which was on completion fitted up in accordance with ancient and correct usage, as regards its chancel, stalls, &c* The appointment of Dr. Peacock to the Deanery of Ely, and the
great works carried out in that cathedral under his authority, were coin- cident with the establishment and early history of the c Cambridge Camden Society ;' and although he never enrolled himself among its members, yet the interest which he felt in the Revival and the practical character of his efforts were of signal value to the cause. After the Society had moved to London it became the custom to
invite the attendance at its committee meetings of architects and decorative artists for the purpose of exhibiting and discussing their designs and productions, which by common consent were afterwards reviewed In the i Ecclesiologist.' In the pages of that journal, and * Further mention of this structure will be made in Chapter XTII. |
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The Oxford Society. 203
during the second phase of its existence, the Society found a sufficient
record of its opinions and transactions. But it also published a useful and matterful f Handbook of English Ecclesiology,' based to some extent on a previously issued pamphlet, but now rewritten chiefly by Sir S. Glynne and Mr. Neale. In 1847 appeared the first series of c Instrumenta Ecclesiastica/ a collection of designs for church fittings, &c, partly original and partly illustrative of old examples. This was compiled by an architect whose early ability had won for him a confidence which has since been well sustained. Among the host of modern churches which have been raised in England during the last twenty years there are none which bear the stamp of originality and thoughtful work in a more eminent degree than those designed by Mr. Butterfield. Nearly contemporary in origin and almost identical in object with
the c Cambridge Camden' was the c Oxford Society for promoting the Study of Gothic Architecture,' established under the patronage of the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Bishop of the Diocese. Its first president was the President of Magdalen College. Among its earliest members were many eminent clergymen and others whose names have since become famous in the several departments of art, literature, and science.* By means of donations it soon formed the nucleus of a useful library and an interesting collection of drawings and casts from the details of mediaeval remains. If not quite so fervent as the Camden in its zeal for the revival of
Gothic, the Oxford Society showed from the first a wise and discrimi- nating judgment on the question of * restorations/ which had the effect of tempering a policy that elsewhere might have sacrificed to considera- * As, for instance, the late Dr. Buckland, afterwards Dean of Westminster, the Rev.
S.J. Rigaud, afterwards Bishop of Antigua; the Earl of Athlone, the Earl ofDunraven, Lord Courtenay, Lord Dungannon, Chevalier Bunsen, Sir Henry Ellis, Sir Francis Pal- grave, and Mr. Ruskin, besides Messrs. E. Blore, B. Ferrey, J. Plowman, W.J, Underwood, A. Salvin, and other architects of note. |
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204 Paper by the Rev. H. G. Liddell.
tions of style many a relic of past times deficient indeed in the highest
qualities of architectural grace, but deserving on other grounds the in- terest and protection of posterity. A paper read before the Society in 1841 by the Rev. H. G. Liddell (the present Dean of Christchurch) contains a remarkable passage bearing on this point. Societies, no less than individuals, when much interested in one object, are
apt to become either microscopic or one-sided in their views ; both these ten- dencies are a kind of pedantry, a fault to which all persons are liable who confine their views too much to one object, and against which it may be useful to warn this and other similar Societies. We must remember how liable every man's mind is to be biassed and warped by systems of exclusive study, and that anti- quarians are peculiarly open to this failing. Let us therefore take warning, and not set our affections on one style only, or on absolute uniformity in each style. This is the pedantry of architecture; this is the one-sidedness we must guard against. Many people, who, to avoid offence, may be called not pedants but purists, seeing a fine old church disfigured, as they would say, by alterations, would begin sweeping all such disfigurements clean away, and restoring the church just as it stood when built. But the alterations of old buildings are in great part their history, and however much you may restore, you cannot recover the original work; and so you may be removing what is of the highest possible interest, to make room for work, correct indeed as a copy, but in itself of little or no value. The practical value of these remarks is enhanced when we remember
that they were uttered thirty years ago, when the Revival of Mediaeval art had all the charm of novelty to amateurs, many of whom took up the cause with more enthusiasm than discretion, and who were inclined to make short work of any relics which did not exactly fulfil their notions of architectural propriety. In 1841 the Oxford Society published a list of old English bridges
for which pontage-charters had been granted, together with a set of printed queries as to the modern condition of these and other ancient structures. By such means much useful information was acquired, and the Society learned by degrees in what direction their aid or interference might be made available. In 1842 they purchased the entire collection |
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Effect of the University Societies, 205
of architectural sketches, nearly 2,000 in number, made by Rickman in
England and on the Continent. They had evidently been intended to form a chronological series of examples, and though the author did not live to complete his project, the drawings, especially those which illus- trated the progress of window tracery, were extremely useful for refer- ence at a time when but few architects had troubled themselves to study with anything like accuracy the monuments of the Middle Ages. Ecclesiastical furniture and fittings received, in due course, special at- tention, at first from amateurs, and afterwards from architects and manufacturers. Monumental brasses were sedulously hunted up, and a collection of heel-ball rubbings was formed to record their design and inscriptions. Encaustic tiles were carefully reproduced from ancient models. Wood carvers were encouraged to imitate as closely as possible the bosses and bench-ends which, full of vigour in fancy and execution, had remained for centuries neglected in many a country church. The history and art of glass-painting were studied with enthusiasm. For practical attention to this subject, as well as to many others allied by association or aesthetic conditions with Mediaeval architecture, the world of art was indebted during many years of the Revival to the labours of amateurs. After making due allowance for the occasional over-fussiness of
antiquarianism, and the excess of ecclesiastical sentiment which was inevitably imported into the movement by its connection with the Universities, there can be no doubt that the Architectural Societies at Oxford and Cambridge did immense service in popularising the Gothic cause among men of refinement and education, who were young enough to acquire a taste, and had leisure to cultivate it without seriously encroaching on the business hours or professional duties of life. In no other way could the seeds of this taste have been scattered so
widely throughout the land. Graduates who left their college rooms for curates' quarters in remote parishes, or to settle down as doctors and |
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206 . Mr. Beresford Hope.
attorneys in many a country town, carried away with them a pleasant
recollection of the friendly meetings at Hutts' and Wyatts', the cheerful field days and church explorations, the interesting papers and lively discussions by which they had profited as boys. By degrees the Mediaeval furore began to localise itself in various parts of England. At Bristol, Exeter, York, Lichfield, and many other cathedral towns f Diocesan' or Archaeological Societies were formed for the definite purpose of encouraging the Revival, of elucidating the principles of Gothic design, and of applying them to the building and restoration of churches. It is certain that these societies, besides doing much practical good by
the direct intervention and agency of their members, became the means of eliciting and turning to advantage a great deal of literary ability. Thus Markland's well known and ably written little work on English Churches had its origin in a letter addressed to and published by the Oxford Society under the title of c Remarks on the Sepulchral Memorials of Past and Present Times,' &c. Numerous papers descriptive of ancient churches were read both at Oxford and Cambridge, and were after- wards printed among the Transactions of each Society, and illustrated with careful woodcuts by Jewitt. In like manner some useful essays prepared for the various diocesan societies gained a popularity and exercised an influence which would have been wanting if they had appeared under the author's name alone.* But results of a more immediate and practical kind soon ensued from
these associations. It was while Mr. Beresford Hope was an under- graduate at Cambridge, and a member of the Cambridge Camden Society in 1840, that he determined to rescue from the ranks of the commonplace in modern ecclesiastical architecture the village church of * Among these may be mentioned * An Essay on Cathedral Worship,' by the Rev. H.
Dudley Ryder; 'Remarks upon Wayside Chapels/ by the Messrs. Buckler; 'A Guide to the Architectural Antiquities in the neighbourhood of Oxford;' ' A Paper on Monu- ments,' by the Rev. John Armstrong; and * The Pue System/ by the Rev. W. Gillmor; besides numerous descriptions of churches which stood in need of restoration. |
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Kilndown Church, Kent. 207
Kilndown in Mid Kent, which had been commenced by his kinsman
Viscount Beresford and other subscribers in the previous year. He began by instructing Mr. Salvin to design a solid stone altar copied from the (Third Pointed) altar tomb of William of Wykeham at Winchester, and raised by three steps above the floor of the church. Acting under the advice of Mr. Whewell^ he ordered from the royal works at Munich stained glass for all the lancet windows. The eastern triplets were filled with the figures of the Virgin and Child, St. Peter and St. Paul. In the south aisle windows were St. Cyprian, St. Ambrose, St. Jerome, St. Augustine, and St. Gregory the Great. The north aisle was devoted to British saints, viz.: St. Alban, St. Augustine of Can- terbury, St. David, the Venerable Bede, St. Edward the Confessor, and King Charles the Martyr. In quality and general treatment these windows are much superior to what is ordinarily known as Munich glass. Mr. Hope's next work at Kilndown was to improve the fittings of the church, which had previously been of a very poor description. It had been planned without a chancel, but a space 15 feet in depth was now set apart at the east end of the nave to serve as a sanctuary. A handsome chancel screen designed by Carpenter (a young architect then rising into notice), and decorated by Willement, was erected. Stone sedilia and oak stalls were added, and a pulpit of the Beaulieu type corbelled out from the south wall of the nave formed a picturesque and at that time novel feature in the interior. A brass lectern and two coronas designed by Butterfield were placed in the chancel. Externally the low pitch of the roof was concealed by a stone
parapet pierced with trefoils. In after years various other alterations and additions were made. A stone lych-gate gave access to the church- yard. An unsightly gallery was removed from the west end of the church, and a richly sculptured reredos was presented by Mr. Hope, in 1869. On the south side of the church the late Lord Beresford erected a handsome canopied monument * over the family vault, in which he * In memory of his wife the Viscountess Beresford (Mr. Beresford Hope's mother). |
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208 Progress of Public Taste.
himself was afterwards buried. The general form of this monument
was borrowed by Mr. Carpenter, who designed it, from that of Arch- bishop Gray in York Cathedral, with certain modifications rendered necessary by the external site and double tomb. Thus enriched and altered from time to time, Christ Church,
Kilndown, without pretending to be a very complete or important specimen of modern Gothic, is interesting in the evidence which it affords of the gradual progress of the Revival during a quarter of a century. Built at a moderate cost to meet the spiritual requirements of a rural district, it will hereafter be associated with the memory of a family to whom it owes its origin and gradual improvement, and whose name has long been distinguished for their attachment to the English Church and to the interests of art. When its foundations were first laid, Mr. Beresford Hope was a
young but zealous member of a society pledged to the practical study of ecclesiology. Twenty years later he was elected its president. During that period great changes took place in the spirit of national art, and in the tendency of religious sentiment in England. Taste in architecture and painting reached a higher standard. Public worship assumed a more imposing form. And the efforts of those who first enterect o~ii the task of uniting the long dissevered elements of comeli- ness and devotion may well be remembered with gratitude. |
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A.D. 1840 to 1850. 209
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CRAMER XII
HE year in which the foundation stone of the Parliament
Houses was laid may be taken as a turning point in the His- tory of the Revival. In the decade of years preceding that event, viz.: from 1830 to 1840, the names of many architects had become more or less associated with the then modern efforts at Gothic design. Of these the most notable (after Pugin, who was probably the youngest) were Shaw, Poynter and Blore, Salvin, Ferrey and Scoles. Others destined to be as intimately and in some instances more con- spicuously identified with the movement, were already in practice; but it was not until after the year 1840 that they were employed in works of any importance, or indeed, that such works assumed the distinctive character of a school. Previous to that period a great deal of Me- dieval sentiment had been engendered in the public mind, but it was a sentiment easily satisfied; and though a vast amount of erudition had been brought to bear upon the examination of ancient buildings, upon the analysis of styles, and the elucidation of principles, it does not seem to have resulted in the erection of any structure which fulfilled the true conditions of Pointed Architecture without incurring the charge of direct plagiarism. Between 1840 and 18 50, however, though portions of old buildings
continued to be copied, they were reproduced with more intelligence and with a better sense of adaptation. The pioneers of the Revival began to design with greater confidence themselves, and were soon joined by others who, profiting by their labours, advanced upon their taste, and laid the foundation for a more scholarlike treatment of the style. Among the new-comers were the late R. C. Carpenter, whose career p
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210 Architects of the Revival.
was destined to be a short but brilliant one; G. Gilbert Scott, the pre-
sent R.A., whose works would need a volume to describe ; M. E. Had- field, of Sheffield, who for some years divided with Pugin the practice which fell to the share of Roman Catholic architects in this country : T. H, Wyatt, now President of the Royal Institute of British Architects, who, on his own account as well as in conjunction with his partner,. Mr. D. Brandon, was largely employed in the restoration and erection of country mansions; J. L. Pearson, E. Christian, and R. Brandon, the most important of whose works were executed after 1850; J. C. Buckler, whose name has been already mentioned; and E. Sharpe, of Lancaster, who, as an antiquary and an author, as well as by his practice, aided in no small degree the progress of the Revival. These gentlemen, with the exception of Messrs^ Wyatt and D. Bran-
don, devoted themselves almost entirely during their professional career to the study and design of Gothic. But there were other contemporary architects who, without pledging themselves to that, or indeed, to any individual style of architecture, achieved success in that particular field. Among these was the late Philip Hardwick, R. A., whose son, Mr. P. C. Hard wick, superintended the design and execution of Lincoln's Inn Hall. From the bizarre and feeble specimens of modern Gothic which were
raised in England between 1840 and 1845, and while the writings of Pugin exercised their earliest influence, this building stands notably apart. The Revival of any extinct school of art must necessarily de- pend, in the first instance, on an imitation of the letter rather than on a realisation of the spirit of ancient work. But the new theorists had yet to learn what they should imitate. It is now generally admitted that the types of English and French Architecture which prevailed between the twelfth and fourteenth centuries are incomparably superior to those which followed them. But the early champions who fought for the Pointed Arch saw more beauty in King's College than in the Choir of Lincoln or the nave of Canterbury, and, what was worse, they could not in general distinguish between the merits and demerits of the |
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Lincoln's Inn HalL
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later style. The earlier portions of Hampton Court Palace, and Henry
the Seventh's Chapel at Westminster, both belong to what is generally called the Tudor Period. Tested by a modern standard of educated taste, neither the one nor the other seems to represent the real excellence of Gothic architecture. But for a large public building of a secular character, there can be little doubt which of these two types is capable of being treated with the more becoming grandeur. We are now enabled to compare their respective merits in modern work. In an artistic point of view the selection of the style adopted for the Houses of Parliament has been long since pronounced a mistake. Mr. Hardwick, with infinitely less scope for display, and at a comparatively small outlay, designed a building which will still bear comparison with many which have been raised a quarter of a century later, with all the advantages of additional study and maturer criticism. In general arrangement the plan is exceedingly simple, but well con-
sidered both for effect and convenience. It consists of two main blocks, viz. : the Great Hall, which extends from north to south, and the Li- brary, which is at right angles to the Hall. These are connected by an octagonal lobby, flanked by the Benchers' Room and Council Room, while the kitchen and servants' offices occupy the ground floor and basement stories. All the external walls are faced with a fine red brick, chequered at intervals with black f headers ' distributed in ornamental patterns, as in old buildings of this character : the quoins, oriels, window dressings and arch mouldings, being of stone. An octagonal turret at the north-west angle forms a picturesque and pretty feature in the main front, and the general proportions of the whole design are excellent. As a rule, the constructive features of this building are honestly introduced when they are wanted; and there is a careful avoidance of those scenic and complicated shams which were unfortunately employed in many works of the same date for the mere sake of effect. The south elevation is boldly and broadly treated. It presents the gable end of the Great Hall, flanked by two square towers, of which that on the east side is used, on p 2
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212 Lincoln's Inn HalL
the first floor \evoi3 as a porch. Much of the effect of this front depends
on the great simplicity of its masses : it is not cut up into meaningless detail, nor overloaded vsith a profusion of ornament. On the contrary, there is a good broad surface of wall for the eye to rest on, and there- fore, where carving is introduced (as in the band of panels at the summit of each tower) its artistic value is considerably enhanced. The character of the carved work is somewhat in advance of its day,
but it lacks—especially in the treatment of animal form—the refinement, while it scarcely imitates the vigour, of old work. A notion once pre- vailed with the detractors, and even with some of the admirers of Gothic art, that the conception of those quaint and extravagant monsters which do duty for gurgoyles and corbels in many a Mediaeval building was due to the old sculptors' utter disregard of anatomy. That such a notion is altogether erroneous, will, however, be admitted by all who have examined these grotesque examples with attention. On the contrary, many of them exhibit a strong suggestion of muscular power. It is certain that they possess a vitality of action which the modern artist finds it difficult to realise in such objects, especially when he has to work from a drawing by another hand. The old carver was his own designer, and it was his rude unsophisticated interpretation of Nature, not his wilful contempt of her pattern-book, which lent his handiwork its charm. The interior of the Great Hall is undoubtedly very imposing, and
is equal if not superior to anything of the kind which had then been attempted in modern Gothic. Its open timber roof, well framed, and of generous dimensions, is well suited, both in pitch and construction, to the proportions of the Hall itself. At the south end of the Hall there is a wooden gallery, picturesque in general arrangement, but open to criti- cism in points of detail, the figures with which it is decorated being somewhat large for their situation; and the carved foliage—like all similar work of that date—being coldly though carefully executed. The Hall is panelled all round the other sides to a height of about |
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Lincoln's Inn Hall. 213
twelve feet, the upper parts of the north end having been since decorated
with the large and well-known fresco painting by Mr. G. F. Watts, R.A. The general design of the Library roof was apparently suggested
by that of Eltharn Palace, but it is partially ceiled, and thus loses the character of the original. The octagonal lobby, which connects the Great Hall and Library, shares the fate of all vestibules designed on a similar plan: internally, it is too lofty for Its width; externally, the octagon, which scarcely rises above the roofs around it, is insig- nificant in height. A terrace wralk runs along the whole length of the building on the
east side. This feature, in addition to the gardens by which it is surrounded, considerably enhances its effect; and indeed, the situation, in itself favourable, has been altogether most judiciously and success- fully treated. The entrance gate-way, lodges, &c, were all carefully designed in accordance with the character of the main block, and the isolation of the whole group from surrounding buildings is very ad- vantageous to its appearance. Considering that Lincoln's Inn Hall was begun nearly thirty years ago, while the reproduction of Gothic was still marked by the most flagrant solecisms, and hampered by the grossest ignorance of those principles which are essential to the style, this building may fairly be ranked, for its time, as one of the best and most successful examples of the Revival. The completion of any public structure in London or any populous
town does more to educate architectural taste than whole libraries full of books and essays. But there was a large portion of provincial England which had yet to be converted by other means, and apostles willing to preach what they conceived to be a great artistic truth were not wanting. In 1842, the Rev. W. Drake delivered a series of lectures upon
Church Architecture in St. Mary's Hall, Coventry, which had con- siderable effect on the local encouragement of Gothic. The lecturer |
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Mr. Drakes Lectures.
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214
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insisted upon the importance of adhering to ancient types of ecclesias-
tical art, and deprecated the erection of cheap buildings. He drew attention to the neglected state of many rural churches, gave some useful information as to their proper appointments, and added his testimony to the abuses of the pew system, which were now be- ginning to be generally acknowledged by all who cared to think on the subject. In the same year Mr. A. Bartholomew published his essay c On the
Decline of Excellence in the Structure and Science of Modern English Buildings.' This did good service to the Revival by showing the close connection which existed between structural stability and architectural grace in mediaeval designs. The authors of this time who wrote in defence of Gothic, had been generally content to base their recom- mendation of the style on considerations of taste, convenience, historical interest, or nationality. Its structural superiority from a scientific point of view seems as a rule to have escaped notice. Pugin, indeed, had In his £ Contrasts' endeavoured to draw attention to the judicious skill displayed by the Mediaeval builders as compared with those of a modern and degenerate age ; and Professor Willis, in his well-known essay on the Vaulting of the Middle Ages (published by the Royal Institute of British Architects, in 1842), had thrown considerable light on a subject con- cerning which in this country at least much ignorance still prevailed. But Pugin was* too superficial, and Willis too deep, for the ordinary professional reader. The average architect of thirty years ago was neither.an enthusiastic sentimentalist, nor a profound mathematician. He regarded the art mainly in a practical light; and, if he was to be converted to theories respecting the advantage of one style over another, k was necessary that he should be approached in a matter-of-fact and practical manner. A handy book, or manual to assist architects In the preparation of specifications, was much needed at this time, and * Bar- tholomew, himself a member of the profession, undertook to prepare one. This portion of his work, though since superseded by another |
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Bartholomew's Essay. 215
more suited to the requirements of the present day,* was very useful in
its time, but it was preceded by an essay which occupied nearly half the volume and with which the author's name will be more permanently associated. In this essay Bartholomew pointed out ' the decline of excellence in the structure and in the science of modern English buildings,' and added s a Proposal of remedies for those defects.' Many of his comments and suggestions may seem superfluous to the modern critic, but at the time they were made, and coming as they did from a man of no narrow or bigoted views, their influence was widely felt. In a lucid and perfectly impartial manner he demonstrated the structural stability of the pointed arch, the scie itific relations of vaults and their abutments, the origin of form in flying buttresses, and the use of pinnacles. He deplored the degeneracy, the flimsiness, the alternate stint and waste of material in modern architecture: con- demned the improper use of stucco, abused the medley of styles which still found favour in his day, and was especially severe on f the gross corruption of the kind of building called fC Elizabethan." ' Bartholomew, moreover, was probably the first to enunciate a
principle now generally accepted by writers on art, viz.: that the conditions of true taste in architecture have always been intimately associated with those of structural excellence, and that, whenever the latter have been disregarded, the former have suffered in consequence. His treatise abounds in sound and pertinent remarks on this and many other branches of the subject. Here and there it may be verbose -—a fault which the literary style of the day no doubt helped to en- courage__but it is always readable, and there was some excuse for saying a great deal on matters which had so long escaped attention.
The essay is methodically divided into short chapters, which are sub- divided into sections, illustrated (where necessary) by diagrams and woodcuts. Nothing can be clearer than his explanations; nothing more reasonable than his arguments. He wrote with no blind en~ * By Professor Donaldson, F.R.I.B.A., &c.
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216 Bartholomew s Essay.
thusiasm for Gothic—and indeed seems equally in favour of Classic
design—but he protests emphatically against the impositions, the faulty construction and the pedantry of modern architecture, and is never tired of repeating how widely it has departed from the principles of ancient art. Occasionally, it is true, in matters of detail he advanced opinions which the purist of our own day would condemn as heretical. An architect who proposes to divide a stone mull ion into two halves, for the purpose of securing the advantage of a sash window in his Gothic house, may justify the proposal by considerations of expediency, but can scarcely defend it on practical grounds. It may be folly to reject a modern convenience for the sake of artistic effect. But if we adopt it, we must adopt with it the external conditions which belong to its use. A stone mullion shaped to receive a casement is an intel- ligible and perfectly legitimate feature; but two strips of stone shaped to look like a solid mullion, and really concealing a hollow sash frame, represent at best a clumsy compromise between traditional form and present requirements in architecture. Notwithstanding a few minor errors of this kind—errors which may
be the more readily excused when we remember that the study of the style was still in its infancy—Bartholomew's essay may be described on the whole as the work of a thoroughly practical man, who drew at- tention to the scientific side of mediaeval architecture at a time when most of its supporters talked of nothing but its sentimental or artistic claims to adoption. The antiquarian societies, however, on their part, did good service in
continuing their efforts to preserve as samples for study many a relic of ancient art which had remained neglected in country districts, where Mediaeval sympathies were as yet unknown. Among these the British Archaeological Association, formed ' for the encouragement and prose- cution of researches into the Early and Middle Ages, particularly in England,' soon enrolled as its members some of the most eminent architects, artists, and dilettanti of the day. An acting committee was |
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Exhibition of Mediceval Art. 217
appointed, who put themselves in communication with similar societies
in the provinces and on the Continent ; held frequent meetings ; pro- moted investigations with the aid of professional assistance; interfered, when possible, to preserve ruinous monuments from destruction ; col- lected drawings illustrating such remains ; arranged for visits to the most remarkable Cathedral towns, &c, in England, and published reports of their proceedings for general information. The choice of style of the Houses of Parliament was now a matter
beyond dispute; but the nature of its internal decoration remained to some extent an open question. For this reason, and with a view, no doubt, to test the public taste in such matters, Her Majesty's Com- missioners of Fine Arts decided on holding an exhibition at West- minster of the designs, &c, which had been submitted for the fittings and furniture of the New Palace. It included specimens of wood- carving, stained glass, and metal work suggested for use in various parts of the building. Being destined for this purpose, they naturally aimed at a mediaeval character ; and, though probably few approached the standard of excellence by which such objects were judged ten years later, the exhibition was of undoubted value, as an incentive to industrial art, and a means of educating public taste before the rage for Inter- national Exhibitions had developed itself. Meanwhile Pugin continued to issue volume after volume and pam-
phlet after pamphlet, not only in support of the Revival, but in abuse of what he loved to call the Pagan styles, and not unfrequently in severe criticism of Gothic designs by his professional contemporaries. Among others, Mr. Scoles, himself a Catholic architect, who had essayed—not very successfully, it must be confessed—to build a Norman Church at Islington, was soundly rated by this merciless censor, who published a view of the old parish Church of St. Mary, Islington, which he declared (without sufficiently considering the con- ditions of site) should have formed a model for the new building. Qn the other hand, Pugin constantly exposed himself to reproof in
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218 Wilton Church and Cheltenham College.
the public press by his violent attacks not only on the art, but on the
faith of those who chanced to differ from his own convictions, as well as by the injudicious manner in which he insisted on measuring every modern institution and social custom by a Mediaeval standard. It re- quired no great sagacity to perceive that requirements of life in the nineteenth century could never possibly be met by reverting to the habits of our ancestors four or five centuries ago ; and if this was to be a necessary condition of the Revival, no one could be blamed for declining to sacrifice the comforts of advanced civilization for the sake of architectural taste. The most important Anglican Church erected about this time (1843)
was undoubtedly that built, at Wilton, by the Hon. Sidney Herbert, then Secretary to the Admiralty, from the design of Messrs. T. H. Wyatt and D. Brandon. The Lombardic character of this structure excludes it from the list of Gothic examples ; but the liberal munificence of its founder, who spent 2.0,000/. upon the building, and the sump- tuous nature of its decoration, exercised in course of time a great and valuable influence on private patronage and public taste in architecture. Among domestic buildings the Proprietary College at Cheltenham,
erected from designs by Mr. J. Wilson of Bath, may be mentioned as a fair specimen of early modern Gothic. Its oriel windows, battle- mented turrets, flying buttresses, and crocketed pinnacles do not indeed realise the true spirit of Mediaeval design, but associated in a facade some 2,50 feet in length, could scarcely fail to impress the un- professional critic in favour of the style. Up to this date architecture had no representative in the cheap
periodical journals of the day. The publication, therefore, of the * Builder,' in 1843, brought for the first time within the reach of art workmen and students, an illustrated weekly record of professional news. Without pretending to an exclusive devotion to Gothic, it became the means as time went on of familiarising the general public with many a relic of antiquity, which would otherwise have been |
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Publication of ' The Builder! 219
known only to those who could afford to buy expensive works on
architecture. It published views of churches and manor houses, with details drawn to a larger scale. These woodcuts, rudely as they at first were executed, became very serviceable for reference and information. A curious evidence of the gradual extension of ecclesiastical senti-
ment in connection with the Revival.—even to our school girls—may be noted in the appearance of a little book, entitled c Aunt Elinor's Lectures on Architecture/ published nearly thirty years ago. Its object was to inform young ladies—and no doubt there were many who wished to be informed—of the general history of the Pointed Styles, the orthodox arrangement and fittings necessary In a church, the names and use of its various parts and furniture. All this was very skilfully and carefully explained by the authoress (now known to be Miss M. Holmes), who supplemented her architectural teaching by many hints and suggestions as to the manner in which her readers might best employ their energies in the service of the Church, viz., not by working slippers for their favourite curate, or by subscribing to pre- sent him with a piece of plate, but by employing their needles in the embroidery of altar-cloths, and by saving their pocket-money to pay for a fald-stool or lectern. Meanwhile the effect of the Cambridge Camden Society's exertions
had begun to manifest itself in various quarters throughout the United Kingdom. At Llangorwen in Cardiganshire, a church was erected about 184a, which was pronounced to be in point of style and internal arrangements one of the most complete and successful imitations of ancient models that had yet been produced. It had a stone altar, with an arcaded reredos, a rood screen, a lectern, a Litany desk, and open stalls of oak for the clergy and congregation. At Birmingham, Kingston-on-Thames, Woking, Hanwell, and Shaftesbury, churches were built about the same time from the designs of Mr. G. G. Scott, whose i Martyrs' Memorial' at Oxford contributed in no small degree to establish his reputation as a Gothic architect. These structures |
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220 The Works of Scott and Ferrey.
were freely criticised by the Society, who naturally objected to every
plan which departed in the least degree from ancient tradition in its arrangement. The absence or curtailed proportions of the chancel constituted a gravamen^ to which attention was frequently called, and at length with success. At the present day an architect would as soon think of building a church without a chancel, as of building one without a roof. Mr. Ferrey's design for the Holy Trinity Chapel at Roehampton
was much admired at the time. He was one of the earliest, ablest, and most zealous pioneers of the modern Gothic school. His architectural taste was for years in steady advance of his generation, and as an authority on church planning and general proportions he had scarcely a rival. His work possessed the rare charm of simplicity, without lacking interest. By the use of carefully studied mouldings and a spare but judicious introduction of carved ornament, he managed to secure for his buildings a grace that was deficient in many contem- porary designs, which had been executed with far more elaborate decoration and at greater cost. His country churches are especially notable for this reticent quality of art, and in that respect recall in a great measure the excellence of old examples. As a specimen of the class (though erected at a later period), that of Chetwynd in Shropshire may be cited: there is a picturesque and quiet dignity in its compo- sition which is eminently suggestive of Old English Architecture. In the neighbourhood of London no church of its time was con-
sidered in purer style or more orthodox in its arrangement than that of St. Giles, Camberwell, designed by Mr. Scott in 1841. The nave is divided into five bays by piers alternately round and octagonal in plan, supporting acutely pointed arches, with plain chamfered edges and a dripstone. The clerestory windows (of two lights each) are spanned by arches which spring from attached columns corbelled from the wall. The chancel is probably one of the earliest which during the Revival was built of proper length ; is lighted on either side by taree |
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Church of S. Mary, Chetwynde, Shropshire.
B. Ferry, Architect, 1865.
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EDINBURGH:
Ai\liiil>Jii- J. u jyi
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St. Giles's Church, Camberwell, 221
windows, with a five-light window at the east end. The crux is
groined under the tower, which externally, with canopied niches at its junction with the spire, presents a very picturesque feature. The nave, chance], and transepts have open timber roofs of a plain and un- objectionable character, but the wood fittings generally are hardly worthy of the rest. It is curious to observe in this and other churches of the same date that the aisle galleries, in spite of archaeological and antiquarian protests, continued to be retained as an indispensable feature. That it was a feature inconsistent with a faithful reproduction of ancient models could not, of course, be denied. But it was found difficult to answer the plea in its favour put forward by utilitarians, who argued that by means of a gallery a definite number of additional sittings could be secured. It does not seem to have occurred to these economists that their argument pushed to its limits would have reduced the plan of every church to a simple parallelogram, would have abolished the chancel, substituted iron columns for stone piers, and in short, converted their church into a meeting-room. Few persons as yet fully appreciated the absurdity of doubling the cost of a church by the erection of a tower and spire, while the expense of its superficial area was to be saved by piling the congregation on each other's heads. Happily in the present day sanitary considerations have had their weight in preventing the intrusion of galleries; for, it is obvious that unless the aisles of a church be heightened out of due proportion, the difficulties of ventilation are increased by every gallery which is introduced. The decorative carving in the capitals, &c. of St. Giles's Church is
better in design than execution, being coarsely cut in parts. Yet in these and other details the work showed a decided advance in operative skill. The stained window at the west end, though open to objection in the style of drawing, caught something of the tone of old glass. The metal work and gas fittings (if contemporary with the church) are very creditable for their date. Externally the building would have |
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222 Mr. R. C. Carpenter.
gained in effect if the masonry had been carried up in courses less
uniform in depth, and if the roof had been covered with tiles or slates of the ordinary size. Nevertheless, seen from the road, with its tower and spire rising from the centre of a compact plan, it forms an excellent and well-composed group invested with a certain charm of artistic proportion, which the ordinary church architect of that day seldom or never succeeded in realising. To give even a brief description of the numerous works on which Mr. Scott at this early period of his life was engaged, would be simply impossible. Even to catalogue those which he has since undertaken would be an arduous task. Perhaps among the admirers of his early skill there may be those who regret that his practice should have been so extensive as to preclude that concen- trated attention which every artist would gladly bestow on his work. But in any case it must be remembered, that for years he was in the van of the Revivalists : that for years he was facile princeps of de- signers : that for years he laboured with his pen as with his pencil to support the cause which he had at heart; and that if the fashion of art has undergone a change since he was young, in the Middle Ages themselves it was subject to a like mutability.— Credette Cimabue, nella pittura,
Tener lo campo, ed ora ha Giotto il grido.
Mr. R. C. Carpenter's name has been already mentioned among the
group of English architects who between 1840 and 1850 distinguished themselves and advanced the Gothic cause by their ability in the field of design: and perhaps it is not too much to say that in that group his name should have pre-eminence—if not for the extent of his works —(though they were numerous for his unfortunately short life)—-at least for their careful and scholarlike treatment. No practitioner of his day understood so thoroughly as Carpenter the grammar of his art. From his earliest youth the study of Mediaeval Architecture had been a passion with him ; and it is said that when only nineteen years of age he had prepared the design for a c First Pointed' Church of a large and |
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St. Stephens and St. Andrew s, Birmingham. 223
sumptuous character, which but for an accidental circumstance might
have been erected at Islington. As a pupil he appears to have given remarkable attention to the character and application of mouldings, and indeed the judicious use which he made of them and other details bears ample testimony to the fact. A knowledge of the laws of pro- portion, of the conditions of light and shade, and the effective employ- ment of decorative features are arrived at by most architects gradually and after a series of tentative experiments. Carpenter seems to have acquired this knowledge very early in his career, so that even his first works possess an artistic quality far in advance of their date, while those which he executed in later years are regarded even now with admiration by all who have endeavoured to maintain the integrity of our old national styles. Whether, if Carpenter had lived, he would have been influenced by the growing taste for Continental Gothic, which for a while threatened to obliterate the traditions of English architecture, may be doubted. It is certain that up to the time of his death, which occurred in 1855, we find no trace of such an influence on his designs. His first church was that of St. Stephen at Birmingham, probably
commenced in 1841, about which time he became (through Pugin's introduction) a member of the Ecclesiological Society. St. Andrew's (also in Birmingham) was his next commission, for the execution of which he deservedly obtained great credit. It is built of red sandstone, and belongs in common with most of his works to the f Middle Pointed' period. The plan consists of a nave and rather short chancel, with an engaged tower of three stages at the north-west angle. The stone spire surmounting the tower is from a Rutlandshire model, and far less elancee in its proportions than the ordinary modern spire of its date (1844.) The interior is very plain, with a partially open roof over the nave, which is five bays in length. The chancel roof is ceiled and panelled. The window tracery partakes both of a geometrical and flowing character, and is well studied. The arch mouldings of the |
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224 The Works of R. C. Carpenter.
entrance porch and the weathering of the buttresses show a marked
improvement in the treatment of detail. In the following year Mr. Carpenter began the Church of St. Paul
at Brighton, a well-known structure, remarkable not only for the great advance which it indicates in the study of decorative features, but for the peculiarities of plan which, owing to the conditions of its site, became a matter of necessity. This was probably one of the first modern country-town churches erected with a palpable recognition of those changes of ritual which were now openly encouraged by a certain sec- tion of the clergy and as certainly approved by a large body of laymen. Among others erected from Mr. Carpenter's designs were those of Cookham Dean ; St. James, Stubbing, in Berkshire; St. Nicholas at Kemerton in Gloucestershire; St. Andrew at Monckton Wyld in Dor- setshire; St. Peter the Great at Chichester; St. Mary Magdalene, in Munster Square, London (an excellent example of his skill) ; Christchurch at Milton-on-Thames; and St. John the Baptist at Bovey Tracy in Devon. The restorations conducted under his superintend- ence were very numerous—as were also the schools and parsonages which he built in various parts of England. His most important works, the Colleges of St. John, Hurstpierpoint, and of St. Nicholas, Lancing, were designed at a later period, and unfortunately he did not live to see the latter building executed. The progress of the Gothic Revival during Carpenter's lifetime, and
-—while the style of design with which its name is associated was as yet caviare to the multitude—received timely aid and encouragement from the taste and munificence of private patrons whose antiquarian researches and accurate connoisseurship raised them above the prejudices which still lingered to the disadvantage of Mediaeval Art. Among these Mr. Beresford Hope may be reckoned one of the most active and enthusiastic. The instances in which this gentleman has exercised an influence, either directly, or by means of his public position, to effect not only the restoration and maintenance of Old English Architecture, but also the |
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St. Augustines Abbey, Canterbury. 225
reproduction of its beauties in modern work—are too well known to
need enumeration here. A notable example may, however, be men- tioned in which he found a field for the twofold accomplishment of his wishes. St. Augustine's Abbey at Canterbury was one of the numerous mon-
astic buildings which were disestablished after the Reformation. It had been originally founded by St. Augustine as the burial-place of the Kings of Kent and of the Archbishops. The courts and buildings which were once included within its walls, are said to have covered sixteen acres of ground. Upon the dissolution of the Abbey its site and ruins became Crown property, and it was in a mansion partly remodelled and partly reconstructed on this spot that Charles I. first met his betrothed. The venerable gateway, which once formed the entrance to the Abbey,
and which dates from the fourteenth or early part of the fifteenth cen- tury, was standing in 1845, but had been preserved for an ignoble purpose. The room within its upper portion, once the state bed- chamber of the Abbey and Palace, had been converted into a brewer's vat, having previously been used as a cockpit. The sacred precincts of the Abbey itself were desecrated by the presence of a common beershop, raised on the site of the Guests' Hall. The Guests' Chapel and the Abbey Church were in ruins. The enclosure, which once echoed only the solemn tread of cloistered monks, or the peaceful ring- ing of the Angelus, had come to resound with the low brawling of skittle players, and a wall which stood under the shadow of the tower raised by Scoland (the first Norman Abbot) was given up to target practice. Such was the condition of St. Augustine's Abbey at a period when
the sympathies of English Churchmen were being roused in favour of Colonial Missions by the praiseworthy exertions of Edward Coleridge. The property was put up for auction, and luckily, both for antiquarian and ecclesiastical interests, it fell into good hands. Mr. Beresford Hope —then M.P. for Maidstone, recognised in the time as well as in the Q
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226 St. Augustine's College] Canterbury.
place, an excellent opportunity to serve at once the National Church and
the National architecture of England. The want of a Training College for our Missionary Clergy had long been felt. If such an Institution was to be established, what better site could be found for it than the Archiepiscopal city of Canterbury; and on what foundation could it be more appropriately raised than on the ruins of a building rich in associa- tions of ecclesiastical history, and dedicated to the first Apostle of Eng- land ? Mr. Hope succeeded in purchasing—not without considerable expense and trouble—the site and remains of the Abbey, and placed them at the disposal of the Archbishop of Canterbury for this purpose ; munificently supplementing his gift with funds towards its endow- ment. The good work and its purpose excited public interest. Friends of the Church came forward with donations in aid of the scheme. Mr. Butterfield—even then one of the most accomplished architects of his day—was engaged to restore such portions of the ancient structure as might be restored, to rebuild where necessary, and to unite the whole into a building worthy of its name. The result was St. Augus- tine's College. The general appearance of this work'—like most of Mr. Butterfield's
domestic architecture—is remarkable for its extreme simplicity. On entering the College through the ancient gateway which has been already mentioned, the visitor finds himself in a spacious quadrangle, three sides of which are occupied by buildings. To the left are the stu- dents' quarters—a long range of rooms under one roof, raised on an open cloister, and reached by two turret staircases, which form effective features on the north side. The floor of these rooms is carried on stone ribs, which span the cloister and abut on piers between the windows. On the east side is the library, a noble and well-proportioned structure, lighted by six pointed windows, for the tracery of which the architect found an excellent and appropriate model in the ancient Archiepiscopal Palace of Mayfield. The basement story of this building, vaulted with brick groins and stone, forms an admirable work-room for the students, |
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St. Augustine s College, Canterbury. 227
who there learn something of practical carpentry, and the details of such
other handicraft as may be useful in the Colonies. An ample porch and picturesque flight of steps lead to the library; which
has an open timber roof, simply but ingeniously framed, and exhibiting a more thorough knowledge of construction than was common in Gothic wood-work of the time. The west side of the quadrangle is occupied by the chapel and refectory, standing at right angles to each other, the former having been recently rebuilt, and the latter partly restored from the old Guesten Hall. The chapel is fitted with stalls to the whole length of both sides, each stall having its f miserere ' seat carved after a different design. Every detail in this chapel, from the encaustic tiles with which the floor is paved to the braced roof overhead, exhibits evi- dence of careful study. The proportions of part to part are excellent, the mouldings graceful and refined in character, and the decorative features—which are but few—skilfully and effectively introduced. The Warden's Lodge and other domestic buildings extend southwards
from the chapel. Externally, the walls of the whole College are chiefly of flint, with stone dressings—the roofs being covered with tiles of light red. These simple materials lend an air of homely rural beauty to the architecture, which is in thorough unison with the dignified modesty of the design. The task which Mr. Butterfield had to execute was not an easy one. Of the ancient monastery there were not sufficient remains left standing to justify what, in an antiquarian sense, would have been a complete restoration. On the other hand, the venerable gateway, though much mutilated, and portions of the block of buildings on its right, were substantially sound, while the excavations on the site of the library disclosed evidence of foundations which it would have been van- dalism to disregard. The architect had to steer a middle course between a reverence for the past and the necessities of the present age. How admirably he succeeded, no one who examines St. Augustine's College with attention can doubt. The entrance gateway was repaired just sufficiently to arrest its decay and no further. The f under croft' of the 22
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228 Mr. Butterfield.
old refectory was rebuilt, and served as a substructure for the new
library. The chapel and hall were carefully restored, with such modifi- cations in regard to plan as were deemed necessary. The cloister and students' rooms occupying the north side of the quadrangle are entirely modern, but the character of their design is in perfect harmony with those portions of the old building which served as a key-note for architectural style. A quarter of a century has elapsed since St. Augustine's was begun. Mr. Butterfield's name has since been associated with larger and more important eommissions. But though his later works |