Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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1
THE
ARCHITECTURE
OF

Leone Batiſta Alberti.
BOOK IX. CHAP. I.
We are here to remember, that there
are
two Sorts of Houſes for private
Men
; ſome for the Town and others
for
the Country; and of theſe again
ſome
are intended for Citizens of meaner Rank,
and
others for thoſe of the higheſt Quality.
We are now to treat of the proper Ornaments
for
each of theſe; but firſt I would premiſe
ſome
few neceſſary Precautions.
We find that
among
the Ancients the Men of the greateſt
Prudence
and Modeſty were always beſt pleaſed
with
Temperance and Parſimony in all Things,
both
publick and private, and particularly in
the
Affair of Building, judging it neceſſary to
prevent
and reſtrain all Extravagance and Pro­
fuſion
in their Citizens in theſe Points, which
they
did to the utmoſt of their Power both by
Admonitions
and Laws.
For this Reaſon Plato
commends
thoſe who, as we have before obſerv­
ed
, made a Decree, that no Man ſhould have in
his
Houſe any Picture that was finer than thoſe
which
had been ſet up in the Temples of their
Gods
by their Forefathers, and that even the
Temple
itſelf ſhould be adorned with no other
Painting
but ſuch a ſingle Picture as one Painter
could
draw in one ſingle Day.
He alſo or­
dained
, that the Statues of the Gods themſelves
ſhould
be made only of Wood or Stone, and
that
Iron and Braſs ſhould be left for the Uſes
of
War, whereof they were the proper Inſtru­
ments
. Demoſthenes cried up the Manners of
the
ancient Athenians, much beyond thoſe of
his
Cotemporaries; for he tells us, they left an
infinite
Number of publick Edifices, and eſpe­
cially
of Temples, ſo magnificent and richly
adorned
that nothing could exceed them; but
they
were ſo modeſt in their private Buildings,
that
the Houſes of the very nobleſt Citizens
differed
very little from thoſe of the meaneſt;
by
which means they effected, what is very
rarely
known among Men, to overcome Envy
by
Glory.
But the Spartans condemned even
theſe
, for having embelliſhed their City more
with
the Builder's Skill, than with the Splendor
of
their own Exploits, while they themſelves
gloried
, that they had adorned their own City
more
by their Virtue than by their fine Build­
ings
.
Among them it was one of Lycurgus's
Laws
, that their Roofs ſhould be wrought with
no
nicer Tool than the Ax, and their Doors
with
the Saw. Ageſilaus, when he beheld
ſquare
Rafters in the Houſes in Aſia, laughed
at
them; and asked the People, whether if
they
had grown naturally ſquare, they would
not
have made them round?
And doubtleſs he
was
in the Right; becauſe, according to the
ancient
Modeſty of his Nation, he was of Opi­
nion
, that the Houſes of private Perſons ought
to
be built only for Convenience, and not for
Beauty
or Magnificence.
It was a Law in

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