Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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1Mauſoleum: Though in Things of that Nature,
I
think Modeſty is beſt. Horace blamed
Mæcenas for having too furious a Paſſion for
Building
.
I commend him, who according to
Cornelius Tacitus, built Otho's Sepulcher, modeſt,
but
extremely durable.
And though it be
true
that private Monuments require Modeſty
and
publick ones Magnificence; yet publick
ones
too are ſometimes praiſed for being as
modeſt
as the others.
We admire Pompey's
Theatre
for the ſurprizing Greatneſs and Dig­
nity
of the Work: A Work truly worthy of
Pompey and of Rome in the Midſt of her
Victories
: but Nero's unadviſedly Fondneſs for
Building
, and mad Paſſion for Undertaking im­
menſe
Deſigns, is commended by nobody.
And beſides, who would not rather have
wiſh
'd, that he who employ'd ſo many thou­
ſand
Men to bore through the Hill near Poz­
zuolo
, had taken the ſame Pains, and beſtowed
the
ſame Expence upon ſome Work of greater
Uſe
?
Who will not deteſt the monſtrous Folly
and
Vanity of Heliogabalus? who had Thoughts
of
erecting a huge Column with Stairs on the
Inſide
of it to mount to the Top, whereon
Heliogabalus himſelf was to be ſet as a God,
which
he pretended to make himſelf.
But not
being
able to find a Stone of that Bigneſs, tho'
he
ſought for it quite to Thebais, he deſiſted
from
his wild Deſign.
Hereunto we may add,
that
we ought not to begin a Thing, which
though
in ſome Reſpects worthy and uſeful,
and
not altogether ſo difficult of Execution,
ſome
particular Opportunity or Means ſavouring
it
at that Time, that yet is of a Nature to ſall
ſoon
to decay, either thro' the Neglience of
Succeſſors
, or Diſlike of the Inhabitants.
I
therefore
find Fault with the Canal which Nero
made
navigable for Callies with five Rows of
Oars
from Avernus to Oſtia, as well as
other
Accounts, as becauſe the Maintaining of
it
ſeem'd to require perpetual and eternal
Felicity
of the Empire, and a Succeſſion of
Princes
all inclined to the ſame Works.
Theſe
Conſiderations
being granted, we ought to re­
flect
duly upon all the Particulars before­
mention
'd, that is to ſay, what Work we un­
dertake
, the Place we are to build in, and
what
the Perſon is that is to build; and to con­
trive
every Thing according to his Dignity and
Neceſſities
, is the Part of a diſcreet and pru­
dent
Architect.
CHAP. XII.
Having weigh'd and conſider'd theſe
Things
you muſt proceed to the Ex­
amination
of the Reſt, whether each of them
be
perfectly contrived and conveniently diſ­
poſed
in its proper Place.
And to do this ef­
fectually
, it is neceſſary you ſhould be full of
this
Perſuaſion, all the while you are medita­
ting
upon theſe Things, that it will be a Scandal
to
you, if as far as in you lies, you ſuffer any
other
Building with the ſame Expence or Ad­
vantages
to gain more Praiſe and Approbation
than
your own.
Nor is it ſufficient in theſe
Caſes
to be only not deſpiſed, unleſs you are
highly
and principally commended, and then
imitated
.
Therefore we ought to be as ſevere
and
diligent as poſſible in our Scrutiny of every
Particular
, as well to ſuffer nothing but what
is
excellent and elegant, as to have all Things
mutually
concur to make the whole Handſome
and
Beautiful, inſomuch that whatever you at­
tempted
to add, or retrench, or alter, ſhould
be
for the Worſe and make a Defect.
But
herein
, I repeat my Advice, let your Mode­
rator
be the Prudence and Counſel of the moſt
experienced
Judges, whoſe Approbation is
founded
upon Knowledge and Sincerity: Be­
cauſe
by their Skill and Directions you will be
much
more likely, than by your own private
Will
and Opinion, to attain to Perfection or
Something
very near it.
And beſides, the
Praiſe
of good Judges is the higheſt Satisfaction;
and
as for others they praiſe you ſufficiently, and
indeed
too much in not doing Something bet­
ter
themſelves.
So that you will be ſure of

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