Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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1
CHAP. IX.
The whole Force of the Invention and
all
our Skill and Knowledge in the Art
of
Building, is required in the Compartition:
Becauſe
the diſtinct Parts of the entire Building,
and
, to uſe ſuch a Word, the Entireneſs of each
of
thoſe Parts, and the Union and Agreement of
all
the Lines and Angles in the Work, duly
ordered
for Convenience, Pleaſure and Beauty,
are
diſpoſed and meaſured out by the Com­
partition
alone: for if a City, according to
the
Opinion of Philoſophers, be no more than
a
great Houſe, and, on the other Hand, a
Houſe
be a little City; why may it not be
ſaid
, that the Members of that Houſe are ſo
many
little Houſes; ſuch as the Court-yard,
the
Hall, the Parlour, the Portico, and the
like
?
And what is there in any of theſe,
which
, if omitted by Careleſſneſs or Negli­
gence
, will not greatly take from the Praiſe
and
Dignity of the Work.
Great Care and
Diligence
therefore is to be uſed in well con­
ſidering
theſe Things, which ſo much con­
cern
the whole Building; and in ſo ordering
it
, that even the moſt inconſiderable Parts
may
not be uncomformable to the Rules of
Art
, and good Contrivance.
What has been
already
ſaid above of the Region and Platform,
may
be of no ſmall uſe in doing of this aptly
and
conveniently; and as the Members of the
Body
are correſpondent to each other, ſo it is
fit
that one Part ſhould anſwer to another in
a
Building; whence we ſay, that great Edi­
fices
require great Members.
Which indeed
was
ſo well obſerved by the Ancients, that
they
uſed much larger Bricks, as well as other
Materials
, about publick and large Buildings,
than
in private ones.
To every Member there­
fore
ought to be allotted its fit Place and pro­
per
Situation; not leſs than Dignity requires,
not
greater than Conveniency demands; not
in
an impertinent or indecent Place, but in a
Situation
ſo proper to itſelf, that it could be
ſet
no where elſe more fitly.
Nor ſhould the
Part
of the Structure, that is to be of the
greateſt
Honour, be thrown into a remote
Corner
; nor that which ought to be the moſt
publick
, into a private Hole; nor that which
ſhould
be moſt private, be ſet in too conſpi­
cuous
a Place.
We ſhould beſides have re­
gard
to the Seaſons of the Year, and make a
great
deal of Difference between hot Places
and
cold, both in Proportions and Situation.
If Rooms for Summer are large and ſpacious,
and
thoſe for Winter more compact, it will
not
be at all amiſs; the Summer ones ſhady and
open
to the Air, and the Winter ones to the
Sun
.
And here we ſhould provide, that the
Inhabitants
may not be obliged to paſs out of
a
cold Place into a hot one, without a Medium
of
temperate Air; or out of a warm one into
one
expoſed to Cold and Winds; becauſe no­
thing
is ſo prejudicial to human Bodies.
And
theſe
ought to agree one Member with ano­
ther
to perfect and compoſe the main Deſign
and
Beauty of the whole; that we may not
ſo
lay out our whole Study in adorning one
Part
, as to leave the reſt neglected and
homely
in Compariſon of it; but let them
bear
that Proportion among themſelves, that
they
may appear to be an entire and perfect
Body
, and not disjointed and unfiniſhed
Members
.
Moreover in the forming of theſe
Members
too, we ought to imitate the Modeſty
of
Nature; becauſe in this, as well as in other
Caſes
, the World never commends a Modera­
tion
, ſo much as it blames an extravagant In­
temperance
in Building.
Let the Members
therefore
be modeſtly proportioned, and ne­
ceſſary
for your Uſes.
For all Building in
general
, if you conſider it well, owes it's
Birth
to Neceſſity, was nurſed by Convenience,
and
embelliſhed by Uſe; Pleaſure was the
laſt
Thing conſulted in it, which is never
truly
obtained by Things that are immode­
rate
.
Let your Building therefore be ſuch,
that
it may not want any Members which it
has
not, and that thoſe which it has, may
not
in any Reſpect deſerve to be condemned.
Nor would I have the Edifice terminated all
the
Way with even continued Lines void of
all
manner of Variety; for ſome pleaſe us by
their
Largeneſs, others with being little, and
others
moderate.
One Part therefore ſhould
be
terminated with ſtrait Lines, another with
curve
, and another again with ſtrait and curve
mixed
together; provided you obſerve the
Caution
I have ſo often given you, to avoid
falling
into the Error of Exceſs, ſo as to ſeem

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