<h3><SPAN name="chap_7"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII.</h3>
<h5>THE PIER BASE.</h5>
<p><span class="scs">I</span>. <span class="sc">In</span> <span class="scs">III.</span> of <SPAN href="#chap_3">Chap. III.</SPAN>, it was stated that when a wall had
to sustain an addition of vertical pressure, it was first fitted to
sustain it by some addition to its own thickness; but if the
pressure became very great, by being gathered up into <span class="sc">Piers</span>.</p>
<p>I must first make the reader understand what I mean by a
wall’s being gathered up. Take a piece of tolerably thick
drawing-paper, or thin Bristol board, five or six inches square.
Set it on its edge on the table, and put a small octavo book
on the edge or top of it, and it will bend instantly. Tear it
into four strips all across, and roll up each strip tightly. Set
these rolls on end on the table, and they will carry the small
octavo perfectly well. Now the thickness or substance of the
paper employed to carry the weight is exactly the same as it
was before, only it is differently arranged, that is to say,
“gathered up.”<SPAN name="FnAnchor_35" href="#Footnote_35"><span class="sp">35</span></SPAN> If therefore a wall be gathered up like the
Bristol board, it will bear greater weight than it would if it
remained a wall veil. The sticks into which you gather it are
called <i>Piers</i>. A pier is a coagulated wall.</p>
<p><span class="scs">II</span>. Now you cannot quite treat the wall as you did the
Bristol board, and twist it up at once; but let us see how you
<i>can</i> treat it. Let <span class="scs">A</span>, <SPAN href="#fig_9">Fig. IX.</SPAN>, be the plan of a wall which you
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page072"></SPAN>72</span>
have made inconveniently and expensively thick, and which
still appears to be slightly too weak for what it must carry:
divide it, as at <span class="scs">B</span>, into equal spaces, <i>a</i>, <i>b</i>, <i>a</i>, <i>b</i>, &c. Cut out a
thin slice of it at every <i>a</i> on each side, and put the slices you
cut out on at every <i>b</i> on each side, and you will have the plan
at B, with exactly the same quantity of bricks. But your wall
is now so much concentrated, that, if it was only slightly too
weak before, it will be stronger now than it need be; so you
may spare some of your space as well as your bricks by cutting
off the corners of the thicker parts, as suppose <i>c</i>, <i>c</i>, <i>c</i>, <i>c</i>,
at <span class="scs">C</span>: and you have now a series of square piers connected by
a wall veil, which, on less space and with less materials, will
do the work of the wall at <span class="scs">A</span> perfectly well.</p>
<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both; " summary="Illustration">
<tr>
<td class="caption1">Fig. IX.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="figcenter2">
<SPAN name="fig_9"><ANTIMG src="images/img072.jpg" width-obs="450" height-obs="512" alt="Fig. IX." title="Fig. IX." /></SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><span class="scs">III</span>. I do not say <i>how much</i> may be cut away in the corners
<i>c</i>, <i>c</i>,—that is a mathematical question with which we need not
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page073"></SPAN>73</span>
trouble ourselves: all that we need know is, that out of every
slice we take from the “<i>b</i>‘s” and put on at the “<i>a</i>’s,” we may
keep a certain percentage of room and bricks, until, supposing
that we do not want the wall veil for its own sake, this latter
is thinned entirely away, like the girdle of the Lady of Avenel,
and finally breaks, and we have nothing but a row of square
piers, <span class="scs">D</span>.</p>
<p><span class="scs">IV</span>. But have we yet arrived at the form which will spare
most room, and use fewest materials. No; and to get farther
we must apply the general principle to our wall, which is
equally true in morals and mathematics, that the strength of
materials, or of men, or of minds, is always most available
when it is applied as closely as possible to a single point.</p>
<p>Let the point to which we wish the strength of our square
piers to be applied, be chosen. Then we shall of course put
them directly under it, and the point will be in their centre.
But now some of their materials are not so near or close to
this point as others. Those at the corners are farther off than
the rest.</p>
<p>Now, if every particle of the pier be brought as near as
possible to the centre of it, the form it assumes is the circle.</p>
<p>The circle must be, therefore, the best possible form of
plan for a pier, from the beginning of time to the end of it.
A circular pier is called a pillar or column, and all good architecture
adapted to vertical support is made up of pillars, has
always been so, and must ever be so, as long as the laws of the
universe hold.</p>
<p>The final condition is represented at <span class="scs">E</span>, in its relation to that
at <span class="scs">D</span>. It will be observed that though each circle projects a
little beyond the side of the square out of which it is formed,
the space cut off at the angles is greater than that added at
the sides; for, having our materials in a more concentrated
arrangement, we can afford to part with some of them in this
last transformation, as in all the rest.</p>
<p><span class="scs">V</span>. And now, what have the base and the cornice of the
wall been doing while we have been cutting the veil to pieces
and gathering it together?</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page074"></SPAN>74</span></p>
<p>The base is also cut to pieces, gathered together, and becomes
the base of the column.</p>
<p>The cornice is cut to pieces, gathered together, and becomes
the capital of the column. Do not be alarmed at the
new word, it does not mean a new thing; a capital is only the
cornice of a column, and you may, if you like, call a cornice
the capital of a wall.</p>
<p>We have now, therefore, to examine these three concentrated
forms of the base, veil, and cornice: first, the concentrated
base, still called the <span class="sc">Base</span> of the column; then the
concentrated veil, called the <span class="sc">Shaft</span> of the column; then the
concentrated cornice, called the <span class="sc">Capital</span> of the column.</p>
<p>And first the Base:—</p>
<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both; " summary="Illustration">
<tr>
<td class="caption1">Fig. X.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="figcenter2">
<SPAN name="fig_10"><ANTIMG src="images/img074.jpg" width-obs="450" height-obs="257" alt="Fig. X." title="Fig. X." /></SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><span class="scs">VI</span>. Look back to the main type, <SPAN href="#fig_2">Fig. II.</SPAN>, page 55, and
apply its profiles in due proportion to the feet of the pillars at
<span class="scs">E</span> in <SPAN href="#fig_9">Fig. IX.</SPAN> <SPAN href="#page072"></SPAN>: If each step in <SPAN href="#fig_2">Fig. II.</SPAN> were gathered
accurately, the projection of the entire circular base would be
less in proportion to its height than it is in <SPAN href="#fig_2">Fig. II.</SPAN>; but the
approximation to the result in <SPAN href="#fig_10">Fig. X.</SPAN> is quite accurate enough
for our purposes. (I pray the reader to observe that I have
not made the smallest change, except this necessary expression
of a reduction in diameter, in <SPAN href="#fig_2">Fig. II.</SPAN> as it is applied
in <SPAN href="#fig_10">Fig. X.</SPAN>, only I have not drawn the joints of the stones
because these would confuse the outlines of the bases; and
I have not represented the rounding of the shafts, because
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page075"></SPAN>75</span>
it does not bear at present on the argument.) Now it would
hardly be convenient, if we had to pass between the pillars, to
have to squeeze ourselves through one of those angular gaps
or br�ches de Roland in <SPAN href="#fig_10">Fig. X.</SPAN> Our first impulse would be
to cut them open; but we cannot do this, or our piers are
unsafe. We have but one other resource, to fill them up until
we have a floor wide enough to let us pass easily: this we may
perhaps obtain at the first ledge, we are nearly sure to get it
at the second, and we may then obtain access to the raised
interval, either by raising the earth over the lower courses of
foundation, or by steps round the entire building.</p>
<p><SPAN href="#fig_11">Fig. XI.</SPAN> is the arrangement of <SPAN href="#fig_10">Fig. X.</SPAN> so treated.</p>
<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both; " summary="Illustration">
<tr>
<td class="caption1">Fig. XI.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="figcenter2">
<SPAN name="fig_11"><ANTIMG src="images/img075.jpg" width-obs="450" height-obs="256" alt="Fig. XI." title="Fig. XI." /></SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><span class="scs">VII</span>. But suppose the pillars are so vast that the lowest
chink in <SPAN href="#fig_10">Fig. X.</SPAN> would be quite wide enough to let us pass
through it. Is there then any reason for filling it up? Yes.
It will be remembered that in <SPAN href="#chap_4">Chap. IV.</SPAN> <span class="scs">VIII.</span> the chief reason
for the wide foundation of the wall was stated to be “that it
might equalise its pressure over a large surface;” but when
the foundation is cut to pieces as in <SPAN href="#fig_10">Fig. X.</SPAN>, the pressure is
thrown on a succession of narrowed and detached spaces of
that surface. If the ground is in some places more disposed
to yield than in others, the piers in those places will sink more
than the rest, and this distortion of the system will be probably
of more importance in pillars than in a wall, because the adjustment
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page076"></SPAN>76</span>
of the weight above is more delicate; we thus actually
want the <i>weight</i> of the stones between the pillars, in order
that the whole foundation may be bonded into one, and sink
together if it sink at all: and the more massy the pillars, the
more we shall need to fill the intervals of their foundations.
In the best form of Greek architecture, the intervals are filled
up to the root of the shaft, and the columns have no independent
base; they stand on the even floor of their foundation.</p>
<p><span class="scs">VIII</span>. Such a structure is not only admissible, but, when
the column is of great thickness in proportion to its height,
and the sufficient firmness, either of the ground or prepared floor,
is evident, it is the best of all, having a strange dignity in its
excessive simplicity. It is, or ought to be, connected in our
minds with the deep meaning of primeval memorial. “And
Jacob took the stone that he had put for his pillow, and set it
up for a pillar.” I do not fancy that he put a base for it first.
If you try to put a base to the rock-piers of Stonehenge, you
will hardly find them improved; and two of the most perfect
buildings in the world, the Parthenon and Ducal palace of
Venice, have no bases to their pillars: the latter has them,
indeed, to its upper arcade shafts; and had once, it is said, a
continuous raised base for its lower ones: but successive elevations
of St. Mark’s Place have covered this base, and parts of
the shafts themselves, with an inundation of paving stones;
and yet the building is, I doubt not, as grand as ever. Finally,
the two most noble pillars in Venice, those brought from Acre,
stand on the smooth marble surface of the Piazzetta, with no
independent bases whatever. They are rather broken away
beneath, so that you may look under parts of them, and stand
(not quite erect, but leaning somewhat) safe by their own
massy weight. Nor could any bases possibly be devised that
would not spoil them.</p>
<p><span class="scs">IX</span>. But it is otherwise if the pillar be so slender as to look
doubtfully balanced. It would indeed stand quite as safely
without an independent base as it would with one (at least,
unless the base be in the form of a socket). But it will not
appear so safe to the eye. And here for the first time, I have
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page077"></SPAN>77</span>
to express and apply a principle, which I believe the reader
will at once grant,—that features necessary to express security
to the imagination, are often as essential parts of good architecture
as those required for security itself. It was said that
the wall base was the foot or paw of the wall. Exactly in the
same way, and with clearer analogy, the pier base is the foot
or paw of the pier. Let us, then, take a hint from nature.
A foot has two offices, to bear up, and to hold firm. As far
as it has to bear up, it is uncloven, with slight projection,—look
at an elephant’s (the Doric base of animality);<SPAN name="FnAnchor_36" href="#Footnote_36"><span class="sp">36</span></SPAN> but as
far as it has to hold firm, it is divided and clawed, with wide
projections,—look at an eagle’s.</p>
<p><span class="scs">X</span>. Now observe. In proportion to the massiness of the
column, we require its foot to express merely the power of
bearing up; in fact, it can do without a foot, like the Squire
in Chevy Chase, if the ground only be hard enough. But if
the column be slender, and look as if it might lose its balance,
we require it to look as if it had hold of the ground, or the
ground hold of it, it does not matter which,—some expression
of claw, prop, or socket. Now let us go back to <SPAN href="#fig_11">Fig. XI.</SPAN>, and
take up one of the bases there, in the state in which we left it.
We may leave out the two lower steps (with which we have
nothing more to do, as they have become the united floor or
foundation of the whole), and, for the sake of greater clearness,
I shall not draw the bricks in the shaft, nor the flat stone
which carries them, though the reader is to suppose them remaining
as drawn in <SPAN href="#fig_11">Fig. XI.</SPAN>; but I shall only draw the shaft
and its two essential members of base, Xb and Yb, as explained
at <SPAN href="#page065"></SPAN>, above: and now, expressing the rounding of these
numbers on <i>a</i> somewhat larger scale, we have the profile <i>a</i>,
<SPAN href="#fig_12">Fig. XII.</SPAN>; <i>b</i>, the perspective appearance of such a base seen
from above; and <i>c</i>, the plan of it.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XI</span>. Now I am quite sure the reader is not satisfied of the
stability of this form as it is seen at <i>b</i>; nor would he ever be
so with the main contour of a circular base. Observe, we have
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page078"></SPAN>78</span>
taken some trouble to reduce the member Yb into this round
form, and all that we have gained by so doing, is this unsatisfactory
and unstable look of the base; of which the chief
reason is, that a circle, unless enclosed by right lines, has never
an appearance of fixture, or definite place,<SPAN name="FnAnchor_37" href="#Footnote_37"><span class="sp">37</span></SPAN>—we suspect it of
motion, like an orb of heaven; and the second is, that the
whole base, considered as the foot of the shaft, has no grasp
nor hold: it is a club-foot, and looks too blunt for the limb,—it
wants at least expansion, if not division.</p>
<table class="nobctr" style="clear: both; " summary="Illustration">
<tr>
<td class="caption1">Fig. XII.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="figcenter2">
<SPAN name="fig_12"><ANTIMG src="images/img078.jpg" width-obs="500" height-obs="504" alt="Fig. XII." title="Fig. XII." /></SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><span class="scs">XII</span>. Suppose, then, instead of taking so much trouble
with the member Yb, we save time and labor, and leave it a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page079"></SPAN>79</span>
square block. Xb must, however, evidently follow the pillar,
as its condition is that it slope to the very base of the wall veil,
and of whatever the wall veil becomes. So the corners of Yb
will project beyond the circle of Xb, and we shall have (<SPAN href="#fig_12">Fig.
XII.</SPAN>) the profile <i>d</i>, the perspective appearance <i>e</i>, and the plan
<i>f</i>. I am quite sure the reader likes <i>e</i> much better than he did
<i>b</i>. The circle is now placed, and we are not afraid of its rolling
away. The foot has greater expansion, and we have saved
labor besides, with little loss of space, for the interval between
the bases is just as great as it was before,—we have only filled
up the corners of the squares.</p>
<p>But is it not possible to mend the form still further? There
is surely still an appearance of separation between Xb and Yb,
as if the one might slip off the other. The foot is expanded
enough; but it needs some expression of grasp as well. It has
no toes. Suppose we were to put a spur or prop to Xb at each
corner, so as to hold it fast in the centre of Yb. We will do
this in the simplest possible form. We will have the spur, or
small buttress, sloping straight from the corner of Yb up to
the top of Xb, and as seen from above, of the shape of a triangle.
Applying such spurs in <SPAN href="#fig_12">Fig. XII.</SPAN>, we have the diagonal
profile at <i>g</i>, the perspective <i>h</i>, and the plan <i>i</i>.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XIII</span>. I am quite sure the reader likes this last base the
best, and feels as if it were the firmest. But he must carefully
distinguish between this feeling or imagination of the eye, and
the real stability of the structure. That this real stability has
been slightly increased by the changes between <i>b</i> and <i>h</i>, in <SPAN href="#fig_12">Fig.
XII.</SPAN>, is true. There is in the base <i>h</i> somewhat less chance of
accidental dislocation, and somewhat greater solidity and weight.
But this very slight gain of security is of no importance whatever
when compared with the general requirements of the
structure. The pillar must be <i>perfectly</i> secure, and more than
secure, with the base <i>b</i>, or the building will be unsafe, whatever
other base you put to the pillar. The changes are made,
not for the sake of the almost inappreciable increase of security
they involve, but in order to convince the eye of the real security
which the base <i>b</i> <i>appears</i> to compromise. This is especially
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page080"></SPAN>80</span>
the case with regard to the props or spurs, which are
absolutely useless in reality, but are of the highest importance
as an expression of safety. And this will farther appear when
we observe that they have been above quite arbitrarily supposed
to be of a triangular form. Why triangular? Why should
not the spur be made wider and stronger, so as to occupy the
whole width of the angle of the square, and to become a complete
expansion of Xb to the edge of the square? Simply
because, whatever its width, it has, in reality, no supporting
power whatever; and the <i>expression</i> of support is greatest
where it assumes a form approximating to that of the spur or
claw of an animal. We shall, however, find hereafter, that it
ought indeed to be much wider than it is in <SPAN href="#fig_12">Fig. XII.</SPAN>, where
it is narrowed in order to make its structure clearly intelligible.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XIV</span>. If the reader chooses to consider this spur as an
�sthetic feature altogether, he is at liberty to do so, and to
transfer what we have here said of it to the beginning of <SPAN href="#chap_25">Chap.
XXV.</SPAN> I think that its true place is here, as an <i>expression</i> of
safety, and not a means of beauty; but I will assume only, as
established, the form <i>e</i> of <SPAN href="#fig_12">Fig. XII.</SPAN>, which is absolutely, as a
construction, easier, stronger, and more perfect than <i>b</i>. A
word or two now of its materials. The wall base, it will be
remembered, was built of stones more neatly cut as they were
higher in place; and the members, Y and X, of the pier base,
were the highest members of the wall base gathered. But,
exactly in proportion to this gathering or concentration in
form, should, if possible, be the gathering or concentration of
substance. For as the whole weight of the building is now to
rest upon few and limited spaces, it is of the greater importance
that it should be there received by solid masonry. Xb and Yb
are therefore, if possible, to be each of a single stone; or, when
the shaft is small, both cut out of one block, and especially if
spurs are to be added to Xb. The reader must not be angry
with me for stating things so self-evident, for these are all
necessary steps in the chain of argument which I must not
break. Even this change from detached stones to a single
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page081"></SPAN>81</span>
block is not without significance; for it is part of the real
service and value of the member Yb to provide for the reception
of the shaft a surface free from joints; and the eye always
conceives it as a firm covering over all inequalities or fissures
in the smaller masonry of the floor.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XV.</span> I have said nothing yet of the proportion of the
height of Yb to its width, nor of that of Yb and Xb to each
other. Both depend much on the height of shaft, and are besides
variable within certain limits, at the architect’s discretion.
But the limits of the height of Yb may be thus generally
stated. If it looks so thin as that the weight of the column
above might break it, it is too low; and if it is higher than its
own width, it is too high. The utmost admissible height is
that of a cubic block; for if it ever become higher than it is
wide, it becomes itself a part of a pier, and not the base of
one.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XVI.</span> I have also supposed Yb, when expanded from
beneath Xb, as always expanded into a square, and four spurs
only to be added at the angles. But Yb may be expanded into
a pentagon, hexagon, or polygon; and Xb then may have five,
six, or many spurs. In proportion, however, as the sides
increase in number, the spurs become shorter and less energetic
in their effect, and the square is in most cases the best form.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XVII.</span> We have hitherto conducted the argument entirely
on the supposition of the pillars being numerous, and in a
range. Suppose, however, that we require only a single pillar:
as we have free space round it, there is no need to fill up the
first ranges of its foundations; nor need we do so in order to
equalise pressure, since the pressure to be met is its own alone.
Under such circumstances, it is well to exhibit the lower tiers
of the foundation as well as Yb and Xb. The noble bases of
the two granite pillars of the Piazzetta at Venice are formed
by the entire series of members given in <SPAN href="#fig_10">Fig. X.</SPAN>, the lower
courses expanding into steps, with a superb breadth of proportion
to the shaft. The member Xb is of course circular, having
its proper decorative mouldings, not here considered; Yb is
octagonal, but filled up into a square by certain curious groups
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page082"></SPAN>82</span>
of figures representing the trades of Venice. The three
courses below are octagonal, with their sides set across the
angles of the innermost octagon, Yb. The shafts are 15 feet
in circumference, and the lowest octagons of the base 56 (7
feet each side).</p>
<p><span class="scs">XVIII.</span> Detached buildings, like our own Monument, are
not pillars, but towers built in imitation of Pillars. As towers
they are barbarous, being dark, inconvenient, and unsafe,
besides lying, and pretending to be what they are not. As
shafts they are barbarous, because they were designed at a time
when the Renaissance architects had introduced and forced into
acceptance, as <i>de rigueur</i>, a kind of columnar high-heeled shoe,—a
thing which they called a pedestal, and which is to a true
base exactly what a Greek actor’s cothurnus was to a Greek
gentleman’s sandal. But the Greek actor knew better, I believe,
than to exhibit or to decorate his cork sole; and, with
shafts as with heroes, it is rather better to put the sandal off
than the cothurnus on. There are, indeed, occasions on which
a pedestal may be necessary; it may be better to raise a shaft
from a sudden depression of plinth to a level with others, its
companions, by means of a pedestal, than to introduce a higher
shaft; or it may be better to place a shaft of alabaster, if
otherwise too short for our purpose, on a pedestal, than to use
a larger shaft of coarser material; but the pedestal is in each
case a make-shift, not an additional perfection. It may, in the
like manner, be sometimes convenient for men to walk on
stilts, but not to keep their stilts on as ornamental parts of
dress. The bases of the Nelson Column, the Monument, and
the column of the Place Vend�me, are to the shafts, exactly
what highly ornamented wooden legs would be to human
beings.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XIX.</span> So far of bases of detached shafts. As we do not
yet know in what manner shafts are likely to be grouped, we
can say nothing of those of grouped shafts until we know more
of what they are to support.</p>
<p>Lastly; we have throughout our reasoning upon the base
supposed the pier to be circular. But circumstances may occur
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page083"></SPAN>83</span>
to prevent its being reduced to this form, and it may remain
square or rectangular; its base will then be simply the wall
base following its contour, and we have no spurs at the angles.
Thus much may serve respecting pier bases; we have next to
examine the concentration of the Wall Veil, or the Shaft.</p>
<hr class="foot" />
<div class="note">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_35" href="#FnAnchor_35"><span class="fn">35</span></SPAN> The experiment is not quite fair in this rude fashion; for the small
rolls owe their increase of strength much more to their tubular form than
their aggregation of material; but if the paper be cut up into small strips,
and tied together firmly in three or four compact bundles, it will exhibit
increase of strength enough to show the principle. Vide, however, <SPAN href="#app_16">Appendix
16</SPAN>, “Strength of Shafts.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_36" href="#FnAnchor_36"><span class="fn">36</span></SPAN> <SPAN href="#app_17">Appendix 17</SPAN>, “Answer to Mr. Garbett.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_37" href="#FnAnchor_37"><span class="fn">37</span></SPAN> Yet more so than any other figure enclosed by a curved line: for the
circle, in its relations to its own centre, is the curve of greatest stability.
Compare <span class="scs">XX.</span> of <SPAN href="#chap_20">Chap. XX.</SPAN></p>
</div>
<hr class="art" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page084"></SPAN>84</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />