<h3>PREFACE.</h3>
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<p><span class="sc">In</span> the course of arranging the following essay, I put many
things aside in my thoughts to be said in the Preface, things
which I shall now put aside altogether, and pass by; for when
a book has been advertised a year and a half, it seems best to
present it with as little preface as possible.</p>
<p>Thus much, however, it is necessary for the reader to
know, that, when I planned the work, I had materials by me,
collected at different times of sojourn in Venice during the
last seventeen years, which it seemed to me might be arranged
with little difficulty, and which I believe to be of value as
illustrating the history of Southern Gothic. Requiring,
however, some clearer assurance respecting certain points of
chronology, I went to Venice finally in the autumn of 1849,
not doubting but that the dates of the principal edifices of
the ancient city were either ascertained, or ascertainable without
extraordinary research. To my consternation, I found
that the Venetian antiquaries were not agreed within a century
as to the date of the building of the fa�ades of the Ducal
Palace, and that nothing was known of any other civil edifice
of the early city, except that at some time or other it had been
fitted up for somebody’s reception, and been thereupon fresh
painted. Every date in question was determinable only by
internal evidence, and it became necessary for me to examine
not only every one of the older palaces, stone by stone, but
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="pageiv"></SPAN>iv</span>
every fragment throughout the city which afforded any clue
to the formation of its styles. This I did as well as I could,
and I believe there will be found, in the following pages, the
only existing account of the details of early Venetian architecture
on which dependence can be placed, as far as it goes. I
do not care to point out the deficiencies of other works on this
subject; the reader will find, if he examines them, either that
the buildings to which I shall specially direct his attention
have been hitherto undescribed, or else that there are great
discrepancies between previous descriptions and mine: for
which discrepancies I may be permitted to give this single and
sufficient reason, that my account of every building is based
on personal examination and measurement of it, and that my
taking the pains so to examine what I had to describe, was a
subject of grave surprise to my Italian friends. The work of
the Marchese Selvatico is, however, to be distinguished with
respect; it is clear in arrangement, and full of useful, though
vague, information; and I have found cause to adopt, in great
measure, its views of the chronological succession of the
edifices of Venice. I shall have cause hereafter to quarrel
with it on other grounds, but not without expression of gratitude
for the assistance it has given me. Fontana’s “Fabbriche
di Venezia” is also historically valuable, but does not attempt
to give architectural detail. Cicognara, as is now generally
known, is so inaccurate as hardly to deserve mention.</p>
<p>Indeed, it is not easy to be accurate in an account of anything,
however simple. Zoologists often disagree in their
descriptions of the curve of a shell, or the plumage of a bird,
though they may lay their specimen on the table, and examine
it at their leisure; how much greater becomes the likelihood
of error in the description of things which must be in
many parts observed from a distance, or under unfavorable
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="pagev"></SPAN>v</span>
circumstances of light and shade; and of which many of the
distinctive features have been worn away by time. I believe
few people have any idea of the cost of truth in these things;
of the expenditure of time necessary to make sure of the
simplest facts, and of the strange way in which separate observations
will sometimes falsify each other, incapable of reconcilement,
owing to some imperceptible inadvertency. I am
ashamed of the number of times in which I have had to say,
in the following pages, “I am not sure,” and I claim for them
no authority, as if they were thoroughly sifted from error,
even in what they more confidently state. Only, as far as my
time, and strength, and mind served me, I have endeavored
down to the smallest matters, to ascertain and speak the truth.</p>
<p>Nor was the subject without many and most discouraging
difficulties, peculiar to itself. As far as my inquiries have extended,
there is not a building in Venice, raised prior to the
sixteenth century, which has not sustained essential change in
one or more of its most important features. By far the
greater number present examples of three or four different
styles, it may be successive, it may be accidentally associated;
and, in many instances, the restorations or additions have
gradually replaced the entire structure of the ancient fabric, of
which nothing but the name remains, together with a kind of
identity, exhibited in the anomalous association of the modernized
portions: the Will of the old building asserted through
them all, stubbornly, though vainly, expressive; superseded
by codicils, and falsified by misinterpretation; yet animating
what would otherwise be a mere group of fantastic masque, as
embarrassing to the antiquary, as to the mineralogist, the
epigene crystal, formed by materials of one substance modelled
on the perished crystals of another. The church of St. Mark’s
itself, harmonious as its structure may at first sight appear, is
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="pagevi"></SPAN>vi</span>
an epitome of the changes of Venetian architecture from the
tenth to the nineteenth century. Its crypt, and the line of
low arches which support the screen, are apparently the earliest
portions; the lower stories of the main fabric are of the
eleventh and twelfth centuries, with later Gothic interpolations;
the pinnacles are of the earliest fully developed Venetian
Gothic (fourteenth century); but one of them, that on
the projection at the eastern extremity of the Piazzetta de
Leoni, is of far finer, and probably earlier workmanship than
all the rest. The southern range of pinnacles is again inferior
to the northern and western, and visibly of later date. Then
the screen, which most writers have described as part of the
original fabric, bears its date inscribed on its architrave, 1394,
and with it are associated a multitude of small screens, balustrades,
decorations of the interior building, and probably the
rose window of the south transept. Then come the interpolated
traceries of the front and sides; then the crocketings
of the upper arches, extravagances of the incipient Renaissance:
and, finally, the figures which carry the waterspouts on
the north side—utterly barbarous seventeenth or eighteenth
century work—connect the whole with the plastered restorations
of the year 1844 and 1845. Most of the palaces in Venice
have sustained interpolations hardly less numerous; and those
of the Ducal Palace are so intricate, that a year’s labor would
probably be insufficient altogether to disentangle and define
them. I therefore gave up all thoughts of obtaining a perfectly
clear chronological view of the early architecture; but
the dates necessary to the main purposes of the book the reader
will find well established; and of the evidence brought forward
for those of less importance, he is himself to judge.
Doubtful estimates are never made grounds of argument; and
the accuracy of the account of the buildings themselves, for
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="pagevii"></SPAN>vii</span>
which alone I pledge myself, is of course entirely independent
of them.</p>
<p>In like manner, as the statements briefly made in the
chapters on construction involve questions so difficult and so general,
that I cannot hope that every expression referring to them
will be found free from error: and as the conclusions to which
I have endeavored to lead the reader are thrown into a form
the validity of which depends on that of each successive step,
it might be argued, if fallacy or weakness could be detected in
one of them, that all the subsequent reasonings were valueless.
The reader may be assured, however, that it is not so; the
method of proof used in the following essay being only one
out of many which were in my choice, adopted because it
seemed to me the shortest and simplest, not as being the
strongest. In many cases, the conclusions are those which
men of quick feeling would arrive at instinctively; and I then
sought to discover the reasons of what so strongly recommended
itself as truth. Though these reasons could every one of
them, from the beginning to the end of the book, be proved
insufficient, the truth of its conclusions would remain the same.
I should only regret that I had dishonored them by an ill-grounded
defence; and endeavor to repair my error by a better
one.</p>
<p>I have not, however, written carelessly; nor should I in
any wise have expressed doubt of the security of the following
argument, but that it is physically impossible for me, being
engaged quite as much with mountains, and clouds, and trees,
and criticism of painting, as with architecture, to verify, as I
should desire, the expression of every sentence bearing upon
empirical and technical matters. Life is not long enough; nor
does a day pass by without causing me to feel more bitterly
the impossibility of carrying out to the extent which I should
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="pageviii"></SPAN>viii</span>
desire, the separate studies which general criticism continually
forces me to undertake. I can only assure the reader, that he
will find the certainty of every statement I permit myself to
make, increase with its importance; and that, for the security
of the final conclusions of the following essay, as well as for
the resolute veracity of its account of whatever facts have
come under my own immediate cognizance, I will pledge myself
to the uttermost.</p>
<p>It was necessary, to the accomplishment of the purpose of
the work (of which account is given in the First Chapter), that
I should establish some canons of judgment, which the general
reader should thoroughly understand, and, if it pleased him,
accept, before we took cognizance, together, of any architecture
whatsoever. It has taken me more time and trouble to do this
than I expected; but, if I have succeeded, the thing done will
be of use for many other purposes than that to which it is now
put. The establishment of these canons, which I have called
“the Foundations,” and some account of the connection of
Venetian architecture with that of the rest of Europe, have
filled the present volume. The second will, I hope, contain all
I have to say about Venice itself.</p>
<p>It was of course inexpedient to reduce drawings of crowded
details to the size of an octavo volume,—I do not say impossible,
but inexpedient; requiring infinite pains on the part of
the engraver, with no result except farther pains to the beholder.
And as, on the other hand, folio books are not easy
reading, I determined to separate the text and the unreducible
plates. I have given, with the principal text, all the illustrations
absolutely necessary to the understanding of it, and, in
the detached work, such additional text as has special reference
to the larger illustrations.</p>
<p>A considerable number of these larger plates were at first
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="pageix"></SPAN>ix</span>
intended to be executed in tinted lithography; but, finding the
result unsatisfactory, I have determined to prepare the principal
subjects for mezzotinting,—a change of method requiring
two new drawings to be made of every subject; one a carefully
penned outline for the etcher, and then a finished drawing
upon the etching. This work does not proceed fast, while I
am also occupied with the completion of the text; but the
numbers of it will appear as fast as I can prepare them.</p>
<p>For the illustrations of the body of the work itself, I have
used any kind of engraving which seemed suited to the subjects—line
and mezzotint, on steel, with mixed lithographs
and woodcuts, at considerable loss of uniformity in the appearance
of the volume, but, I hope, with advantage, in rendering
the character of the architecture it describes. And both in
the plates and the text I have aimed chiefly at clear intelligibility;
that any one, however little versed in the subject, might
be able to take up the book, and understand what it meant
forthwith. I have utterly failed of my purpose, if I have not
made all the essential parts of the essay intelligible to the least
learned, and easy to the most desultory readers, who are likely
to take interest in the matter at all. There are few passages
which even require so much as an acquaintance with the elements
of Euclid, and these may be missed, without harm to
the sense of the rest, by every reader to whom they may
appear mysterious; and the architectural terms necessarily employed
(which are very few) are explained as they occur, or in
a note; so that, though I may often be found trite or tedious,
I trust that I shall not be obscure. I am especially anxious to
rid this essay of ambiguity, because I want to gain the ear of
all kinds of persons. Every man has, at some time of his life,
personal interest in architecture. He has influence on the
design of some public building; or he has to buy, or build, or
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="pagex"></SPAN>x</span>
alter his own house. It signifies less whether the knowledge
of other arts be general or not; men may live without buying
pictures or statues: but, in architecture, all must in some way
commit themselves; they <i>must</i> do mischief, and waste their
money, if they do not know how to turn it to account.
Churches, and shops, and warehouses, and cottages, and small
row, and place, and terrace houses, must be built, and lived in,
however joyless or inconvenient. And it is assuredly intended
that all of us should have knowledge, and act upon our knowledge,
in matters with which we are daily concerned, and not
to be left to the caprice of architects or mercy of contractors.
There is not, indeed, anything in the following essay bearing
on the special forms and needs of modern buildings; but the
principles it inculcates are universal; and they are illustrated
from the remains of a city which should surely be interesting
to the men of London, as affording the richest existing examples
of architecture raised by a mercantile community, for
civil uses, and domestic magnificence.</p>
<p class="f90"><span class="sc">Denmark Hill</span>, <i>February</i>, 1851.</p>
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<h4>THE</h4>
<h2>STONES OF VENICE.</h2>
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