Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

Page concordance

< >
< >
page |< < of 320 > >|
CHAP. III.
In the whole Compaſs of the Art of Build­
ing
, there is nothing in which we ought to
employ
more Thought, Care and Diligence
than
in the laying out and adorning a Tem­
ple
; becauſe, not to mention that a Temple
well
built and handſomely adorned is the great­
eſt
and nobleſt Ornament a City can have; it
is
moreover the Habitation of the Gods: And
if
we adorn and beautify the Houſe where a
King
or any great Man is to dwell, with all the
Art
we are Maſters of, what ought we to do
to
thoſe of the immortal Gods?
Whom we
expect
, when invoked, to be preſent at our Sa­
crifices
, and to give Ear to our Prayers.
And
though
the Gods may deſpiſe thoſe periſhable
Things
which we moſt highly value; yet Men
are
moved by the Purity of beautiful Materials,
and
raiſed by them to Reverence and Devoti­
on
for the Deity to which they are ſacred.
It
is
certain that Temples may be of great Uſe
for
ſtirring up Men to Piety, by filling their
Minds
with Delight, and Entertaining them
with
Admiration of their Beauty.
The An­
cients
were wont to ſay, that Piety was ho­
noured
when the Temples were frequented.
For this Reaſon I would have the Temple
made
ſo beautiful, that the Imagination ſhould
not
be able to form an Idea of any Place more
ſo
; and I would have every Part ſo contrived
and
adorned, as to fill the Beholders with Awe
and
Amazement, at the Conſideration of ſo
many
noble and excellent Things, and almoſt
force
them to cry out with Aſtoniſhment:
This
Place is certainly worthy of God! Strabo
ſays
, that the Mileſians built their Temple ſo
large
, that they were not able to make a Roof
to
cover it; which I do not approve.
The
Samians boaſted of having the biggeſt Temple
in
the World.
I am not againſt building them
ſuch
, that it ſhould be very hard to make any
Addition
to them.
Ornaments are in a Man­
ner
infinite, and even in ſmall Temples there is
always
ſomething which we imagine might
and
ought to be added.
I would have the
Temple
as large as the Bigneſs of the City re­
quires
, but not unmeaſurably huge.
What I
ſhould
chiefly deſire in a Temple, would be
this
, that every Thing which you behold ſhould
be
ſuch; that you ſhould be at a Stand which
moſt
to commend, the Genius and Skill of the
Workmen
, or the Zeal and Generoſity of the
Citizens
in procuring and dedicating ſuch rare
and
beautiful Materials to this Service; and
be
doubtful whether thoſe very Materials con­
duce
moſt to Beauty and Statelineſs, or to Du­
ration
, which, as in all other Buildings both
publick
and private, ſo chiefly in the Structure
of
Temples, ought to be very carefully con­
ſulted
; in as much as it is in the higheſt De­
gree
reaſonable that ſuch a great Expence
ſhould
be well ſecured from being loſt by means
of
any Accidents, beſides that Antiquity gives

Text layer

  • Dictionary
  • Places

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index