Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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1Altar ſix Foot high and twelve Broad; and on
it
placed the Statue of their Deity.
Whether
or
no it be proper to have more Altars for Sa­
crifice
in a Temple, than one, I ſhall leave to
the
Judgment of others.
Among our Fore­
fathers
, in the primitive Times of our Religi­
on
, the devout Chriſtians uſed to meet toge­
ther
at the Holy Supper, not to fill their Bodies
with
Food, but in order to ſoften and huma­
nize
their Manners by frequent Converſation
and
Communion with each other; and having
filled
their Minds with good Inſtructions, they
returned
every Man to his own Home, warm­
ed
and inflamed with the Love of Virtue.
For
having
rather taſted than eat the moderate
Portion
that was ſet before them, they read
and
reaſoned upon all Sort of divine Subjects.
Every one burnt with Charity towards his
Neighbour
, for their common Salvation, and
for
the Divine Worſhip.
Laſtly, every Man,
according
to his Power, paid a Kind of Tax
due
to Piety, for the Maintenance of ſuch as
truly
deſerved it, and the Biſhop diſtributed
theſe
Contributions among ſuch as wanted.
Thus all Things were common among them,
as
among loving Brethren.
Afterwards when
Princes
conſented that theſe Duties ſhould be per­
formed
publickly, they did not indeed deviate
much
from the Inſtitution of their Forefathers;
but
as greater Numbers came in than before,
the
Supper was ſtill more moderate.
The Ser­
mons
preached in thoſe Times by the learned
Biſhops
, are ſtill extant in the Writings of the
Fathers
.
Thus in thoſe Ages they had but
one
Altar, where they uſed to meet to cele­
brate
only one Sacrifice in a Day.
Next ſuc­
ceeded
theſe our Times, which I wiſh to God
ſome
worthy Man might ariſe to reform, and
be
this ſaid without Offence to our Popes, who,
though
to keep up their own Dignity, they
hardly
ſuffer themſelves to be ſeen by the
People
once in a Year, yet have ſo crowded
every
Place with Altars, and perhaps too with
-------But
I ſhall venture to ſay no more.
This I may venture to affirm, that as there is
nothing
in Nature can be imagined more Holy
or
Noble than our Sacrifice, ſo I believe no
Man
of Senſe can be for having it debaſed by
being
made too common.
There are other
Sorts
of Ornaments alſo, not fixed, which
ſerve
to adorn and grace the Sacrifice; and
others
of the ſame Nature that embelliſh the
Temple
itſelf, the Direction of which belongs
likewife
to the Architect.
It has been a Queſ­
tion
which is the moſt beautiful Sight: A large
Square
full of Youth employed about their ſe­
veral
Sports; or a Sea full of Ships; or a Field
with
a victorious Army drawn out in it; or a
Scnate-houſe
full of venerable Magiſtrates; or
a
Temple illuminated with a great Number of
chearful
Lights?
I would deſire that the Lights
in
a Temple ſhould have ſomewhat of a Maje­
ſty
in them which is not to be found in the
blinking
Tapers that we uſe now-a-days.
They
might
, indeed, have a good Effect enough if
they
were ſet in Rows with any thing of a
pretty
Regularity, or ſtuck all along the Edge
of
the Cornice.
But I am much better pleaſed
with
the Ancients, who on the Top of their
Candleſticks
fixed large Shells in which they
lighted
an odoriferous Flame.
They divided
the
whole Length of the Candleſticks into ſe­
ven
Parts, two of which they gave to the Baſe,
which
was triangular, and longer than it was
broad
, and broader at Botton than
at
Top . The Shaft of the Candle­
ſtick
was divided by ſeveral little Pans placed
one
above the other, to catch the Drops that
fell
from the upper Shell; and at the Top of
all
was that Shell, full of Gums and odoriferous
Woods
.
We have an Account how much
ſweet
Balm uſed to be burnt on every Holy­
day
in the principal Churches by the Emperor's
Order
in Rome, at the publick Charge; and it
was
no leſs than five hundred and four ſcore
Pounds
Weight.
And this may ſuffice as to
Lamps
: Let us now juſt mention ſome other
Things
, which are very noble Ornaments in
Temples
.
We read that Gyges gave to the
Temple
of the Pythian Apollo, ſix great Cups
of
maſſy Gold, which weighed thirty thouſand
Pound
Weight; and that at Delphos there
were
Veſſels of ſolid Gold and Silver, each of
which
would contain ſix Amphoras, or about
four-and-fifty
of our Gallons, among which
there
were ſome that were more valued for the
Invention
and Workmanſhip than for the Me­
tal
.
We are told that in the Temple of Juno
at
Samos, there was a Veſſel, carved all about
with
Figures in Steel, ſent by the Spartans as
a
Preſent to Crœſus, ſo large, that it would
hold
three hundred Amphoras, or two thou­
ſand
ſeven hundred Gallons.
We read too that
the
Samians ſent as a Preſent to Delphos an
iron
Cauldron with the Heads of ſeveral Ani­
mals
finely wrought upon it, and ſupported ſe­
veral
kneeling coloſſal Statues ten Foot and a
half
high.
It was a wonderful Contrivance of
Sanniticus the Ægyptian, in the Temple of the
God
Apis, which was extremely rich in diffe­

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