Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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1deficient in his Ears, as to have no Taſte for
Harmony
: It may ſuffice if he does not build
a
private Man's Houſe upon the publick
Ground
, or upon another Man's: If he does
not
annoy the Neighbours, either by his Lights,
his
Spou s, his Gutters, his Drains, or by ob­
ſtructing
their Paſſage contrary to Law: If he
knows
the ſeveral Winds that blows from the
different
Points of the Compaſs, and their
Names
; in all which Sciences there is no Harm
indeed
in his being more expert; but Painting
and
Mathematicks are what he can no more be
without
, than a Poet can be without the
Knowledge
of Feet and Syllables; neither do
I
know whether it be enough for him to be only
moderately
tinctured with them.
This I can ſay of
myſelf
, that I have often ſtarted in my Mind Ideas
of
Buildings, which have given me wonderful
Delight
: Wherein when I have come to re­
duce
them into Lines, I have found in thoſe
very
Parts which moſt pleaſed me, many groſs
Errors
that required great Correction; and up­
on
a ſecond Review of ſuch a Draught, and
meaſuring
every Part by Numbers, I have been
ſenſible
and aſhamed of my own Inaccuracy.
Laſtly, when I have made my Draught into a
Model
, and then proceeded to examine the ſe­
veral
Parts over again, I have ſometimes found
myſelf
miſtaken, even in my Numbers.
Not
that
I expected my Architect to be a Zeuxis in
Painting
, nor a Nicomachus at Numbers, nor an
Archimedes in the Knowledge of Lines and
Angles
: It may ſerve his Purpoſe if he is a
thorough
Maſter of thoſe Elements of Painting
which
I have wrote; and if he is skilled in ſo
much
practical Mathematicks, and in ſuch a
Knowledge
of mixed Lines, Angles and Num­
bers
, as is neceſſary for the Meaſuring of
Weights
, Superficies and Solids, which Part of
Geometry
the Greeks call Podiſmata and Em­
boda
.
With theſe Arts, joined to Study and
Application
, the Architect may be ſure to ob­
tain
Favour and Riches, and to deliver his
Name
with Reputation down to Poſterity.
CHAP. XI.
There is one Thing that I muſt not
omit
here, which relates perſonally to
the
Architect.
It is, that you ſhould not im­
mediately
run and offer your Service to every
Man
that gives out he is going to build; a
Fault
which the inconſiderate and vain-glori­
ous
are too apt to be guilty of.
I know not
whether
you ought not to wait till you are
more
than once importuned to be concerned.
Certainly they ought to repoſe a free and vo­
luntary
Confidence in you, that want to make
uſe
of your Labours and Advice.
Why ſhould
I
offer thoſe Inventions which have coſt me ſo
much
Study and Pains, to gain perhaps no
other
Recompence, but the Confidence of a
few
Perſons of no Taſte or Skill?
If by my
Advice
in the Execution of your intended
Work
, I either ſave you from an unneceſſary
Expence
, or procure you ſome great Conveni­
ence
or Pleaſure; ſurely ſuch a Service de­
ſerves
a ſuitable Recompence.
For this Rea­
ſon
a prudent Man ſhould take care to main­
tain
his Reputation; and certainly it is enough
if
you give honeſt Advice, and correct Draughts
to
ſuch as apply themſelves to you.
If after­
wards
you undertake to ſuperviſe and com­
pleat
the Work, you will find it very difficult
to
avoid being made anſwerable for all the
Faults
and Miſtakes committed either by the
Ignorance
or Negligence of other Men: Upon
which
Account you muſt take care to have
the
Aſſiſtance of honeſt, diligent, and ſevere
Overſeers
to look after the Workmen under
you
.
I would alſo have you, if poſſible, con­
cern
yourſelf for none but Perſons of the higheſt
Rank
and Quality, and thoſe too ſuch as are
truly
Lovers of theſe Arts: Becauſe your Work
loſes
of its Dignity by being done for mean
Perſons
.
Do you not ſee what Weight the
Authority
of great Men is to advance the Re­
putation
of thoſe who are employed by them?
And, indeed, I inſiſt the more upon this Piece
of
Advice, not only becauſe the World has
generally
a higher Opinion of the Taſte and
Judgment
of great Men, than for the moſt
Part
they deſerve, but alſo becauſe I would
have
the Architect always readily and plen­
tifully
ſupplied with every thing that is ne­
ceſſary
for compleating his Edifice; which
thoſe
of lower Degree are commonly not ſo
able
, and therefore not ſo willing to do: to
which
add, what we find very frequent Inſtances
of
, that where the Deſign and Invention has
been
perfectly equal in two different Works,

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