<h3><SPAN name="chap_16"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVI.</h3>
<h5>FORM OF APERTURE.</h5>
<p><span class="scs">I.</span> <span class="sc">We</span> have now, in order, examined the means of raising
walls and sustaining roofs, and we have finally to consider the
structure of the necessary apertures in the wall veil, the door
and window; respecting which there are three main points to
be considered.</p>
<p class="nomarg">1. The form of the aperture, <i>i.e.</i>, its outline, its size, and
the forms of its sides.</p>
<p class="nomarg">2. The filling of the aperture, <i>i.e.</i>, valves and glass, and
their holdings.</p>
<p class="nomarg">3. The protection of the aperture, and its appliances, <i>i.e.</i>,
canopies, porches, and balconies. We shall examine
these in succession.</p>
<p><span class="scs">II.</span> 1. The form of the aperture: and first of doors. We
will, for the present, leave out of the question doors and gates
in unroofed walls, the forms of these being very arbitrary, and
confine ourselves to the consideration of doors of entrance into
roofed buildings. Such doors will, for the most part, be at, or
near, the base of the building; except when raised for purposes
of defence, as in the old Scotch border towers, and our
own Martello towers, or, as in Switzerland, to permit access in
deep snow, or when stairs are carried up outside the house for
convenience or magnificence. But in most cases, whether high
or low, a door may be assumed to be considerably lower than
the apartments or buildings into which it gives admission, and
therefore to have some height of wall above it, whose weight
must be carried by the heading of the door. It is clear, therefore,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page175"></SPAN>175</span>
that the best heading must be an arch, because the
strongest, and that a square-headed door must be wrong, unless
under Mont-Cenisian masonry; or else, unless the top of the
door be the roof of the building, as in low cottages. And a
square-headed door is just so much more wrong and ugly than a
connexion of main shafts by lintels, as the weight of wall above
the door is likely to be greater than that above the main shafts.
Thus, while I admit the Greek general forms of temple to be
admirable in their kind, I think the Greek door always offensive
and unmanageable.</p>
<p><span class="scs">III.</span> We have it also determined by necessity, that the
apertures shall be at least above a man’s height, with perpendicular
sides (for sloping sides are evidently unnecessary, and
even inconvenient, therefore absurd) and level threshold; and
this aperture we at present suppose simply cut through the
wall without any bevelling of the jambs. Such a door, wide
enough for two persons to pass each other easily, and with such
fillings or valves as we may hereafter find expedient, may be
fit enough for any building into which entrance is required
neither often, nor by many persons at a time. But when
entrance and egress are constant, or
required by crowds, certain further
modifications must take place.</p>
<table style="float: right; width: auto;" summary="Illustration">
<tr>
<td class="caption1">Fig. XLIII</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="figright2">
<SPAN name="fig_43"><ANTIMG src="images/img175.jpg" width-obs="250" height-obs="154" alt="Fig. XLIII" title="Fig. XLIII" /></SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><span class="scs">IV.</span> When entrance and egress
are constant, it may be supposed
that the valves will be absent or unfastened,—that
people will be passing
more quickly than when the entrance and egress are unfrequent,
and that the square angles of the wall will be inconvenient
to such quick passers through. It is evident, therefore,
that what would be done in time, for themselves, by the
passing multitude, should be done for them at once by the
architect; and that these angles, which would be worn away
by friction, should at once be bevelled off, or, as it is called,
splayed, and the most contracted part of the aperture made as
short as possible, so that the plan of the entrance should become
as at <i>a</i>, <SPAN href="#fig_43">Fig. XLIII.</SPAN></p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page176"></SPAN>176</span></p>
<p><span class="scs">V.</span> Farther. As persons on the outside may often
approach the door or depart from it, <i>beside</i> the building, so as
to turn aside as they enter or leave the door, and therefore
touch its jamb, but, on the inside, will in almost every case
approach the door, or depart from it in the direct line of the
entrance (people generally walking <i>forward</i> when they enter a
hall, court, or chamber of any kind, and being forced to do so
when they enter a passage), it is evident that the bevelling may
be very slight on the inside, but should be large on the outside,
so that the plan of the aperture should become as at <i>b</i>, <SPAN href="#fig_43">Fig.
XLIII.</SPAN> Farther, as the bevelled wall cannot conveniently
carry an unbevelled arch, the door arch must be bevelled also,
and the aperture, seen from the outside, will have somewhat
the aspect of a small cavern diminishing towards the interior.</p>
<p><span class="scs">VI.</span> If, however, beside frequent entrance, entrance is
required for multitudes at the same time, the size of the aperture
either must be increased, or other apertures must be introduced.
It may, in some buildings, be optional with the architect
whether he shall give many small doors, or few large
ones; and in some, as theatres, amphitheatres, and other places
where the crowd are apt to be impatient, many doors are by
far the best arrangement of the two. Often, however, the
purposes of the building, as when it is to be entered by processions,
or where the crowd most usually enter in one direction,
require the large single entrance; and (for here again the
�sthetic and structural laws cannot be separated) the expression
and harmony of the building require, in nearly every case,
an entrance of largeness proportioned to the multitude which
is to meet within. Nothing is more unseemly than that a
great multitude should find its way out and in, as ants and
wasps do, through holes; and nothing more undignified than
the paltry doors of many of our English cathedrals, which look
as if they were made, not for the open egress, but for the
surreptitious drainage of a stagnant congregation. Besides,
the expression of the church door should lead us, as far as
possible, to desire at least the western entrance to be single,
partly because no man of right feeling would willingly lose the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page177"></SPAN>177</span>
idea of unity and fellowship in going up to worship, which is
suggested by the vast single entrance; partly because it is at
the entrance that the most serious words of the building are
always addressed, by its sculptures or inscriptions, to the
worshipper; and it is well, that these words should be spoken
to all at once, as by one great voice, not broken up into weak
repetitions over minor doors.</p>
<p>In practice the matter has been, I suppose, regulated almost
altogether by convenience, the western doors being single in
small churches, while in the larger the entrances become three
or five, the central door remaining always principal, in consequence
of the fine sense of composition which the medi�val
builders never lost. These arrangements have formed the
noblest buildings in the world. Yet it is worth observing<SPAN name="FnAnchor_55" href="#Footnote_55"><span class="sp">55</span></SPAN>
how perfect in its simplicity the single entrance may become,
when it is treated as in the Duomo and St. Zeno of Verona,
and other such early Lombard churches, having noble porches,
and rich sculptures grouped around the entrance.</p>
<p><span class="scs">VII.</span> However, whether the entrances be single, triple, or
manifold, it is a constant law that one shall be principal, and
all shall be of size in some degree proportioned to that of
the building. And this size is, of course, chiefly to be expressed
in width, that being the only useful dimension in a
door (except for pageantry, chairing of bishops and waving of
banners, and other such vanities, not, I hope, after this century,
much to be regarded in the building of Christian temples);
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page178"></SPAN>178</span>
but though the width is the only necessary dimension, it is well
to increase the height also in some proportion to it, in order
that there may be less weight of wall above, resting on the
increased span of the arch. This is, however, so much the
necessary result of the broad curve of the arch itself, that there
is no structural necessity of elevating the jamb; and I believe
that beautiful entrances might be made of every span of arch,
retaining the jamb at a little more than a man’s height, until
the sweep of the curves became so vast that the small vertical
line became a part of them, and one entered into the temple as
under a great rainbow.</p>
<p><span class="scs">VIII.</span> On the other hand, the jamb <i>may</i> be elevated indefinitely,
so that the increasing entrance retains <i>at least</i> the
proportion of width it had originally; say 4 ft. by 7 ft. 5 in.
But a less proportion of width than this has always a meagre,
inhospitable, and ungainly look except in military architecture,
where the narrowness of the entrance is necessary, and its
height adds to its grandeur, as between the entrance towers
of our British castles. This law however, observe, applies
only to true doors, not to the arches of porches, which may be
of any proportion, as of any number, being in fact intercolumniations,
not doors; as in the noble example of the west
front of Peterborough, which, in spite of the destructive
absurdity of its central arch being the narrowest, would still,
if the paltry porter’s lodge, or gatehouse, or turnpike, or whatever
it is, were knocked out of the middle of it, be the noblest
west front in England.</p>
<p><span class="scs">IX.</span> Further, and finally. In proportion to the height and
size of the building, and therefore to the size of its doors, will
be the thickness of its walls, especially at the foundation, that
is to say, beside the doors; and also in proportion to the
numbers of a crowd will be the unruliness and pressure of it.
Hence, partly in necessity and partly in prudence, the splaying
or chamfering of the jamb of the larger door will be
deepened, and, if possible, made at a larger angle for the large
door than for the small one; so that the large door will always
be encompassed by a visible breadth of jamb proportioned to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page179"></SPAN>179</span>
its own magnitude. The decorative value of this feature we
shall see hereafter.</p>
<p><span class="scs">X.</span> The second kind of apertures we have to examine
are those of windows.</p>
<p>Window apertures are mainly of two kinds; those for outlook,
and those for inlet of light, many being for both purposes,
and either purpose, or both, combined in military architecture
with those of offence and defence. But all window
apertures, as compared with door apertures, have almost infinite
licence of form and size: they may be of any shape, from the
slit or cross slit to the circle;<SPAN name="FnAnchor_56" href="#Footnote_56"><span class="sp">56</span></SPAN> of any size, from the loophole
of the castle to the pillars of light of the cathedral apse. Yet,
according to their place and purpose, one or two laws of fitness
hold respecting them, which let us examine in the two
classes of windows successively, but without reference to military
architecture, which here, as before, we may dismiss as a
subject of separate science, only noticing that windows, like
all other features, are always delightful, if not beautiful, when
their position and shape have indeed been thus necessarily
determined, and that many of their most picturesque forms
have resulted from the requirements of war. We should also
find in military architecture the typical forms of the two
classes of outlet and inlet windows in their utmost development;
the greatest sweep of sight and range of shot on the
one hand, and the fullest entry of light and air on the other,
being constantly required at the smallest possible apertures.
Our business, however, is to reason out the laws for ourselves,
not to take the examples as we find them.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XI.</span> 1. Outlook apertures. For these no general outline
is determinable by the necessities or inconveniences of outlooking,
except only that the bottom or sill of the windows, at
whatever height, should be horizontal, for the convenience of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page180"></SPAN>180</span>
leaning on it, or standing on it if the window be to the ground.
The form of the upper part of the window is quite immaterial,
for all windows allow a greater range of sight when they are
<i>approached</i> than that of the eye itself: it is the approachability
of the window, that is to say, the annihilation of the thickness
of the wall, which is the real point to be attended to. If,
therefore, the aperture be inaccessible, or so small that the
thickness of the wall cannot be entered, the wall is to be
bevelled<SPAN name="FnAnchor_57" href="#Footnote_57"><span class="sp">57</span></SPAN> on the outside, so as to increase the range of sight as
far as possible; if the aperture can be entered, then bevelled
from the point to which entrance is possible. The bevelling
will, if possible, be in every direction, that is to say, upwards
at the top, outwards at the sides, and downwards at the bottom,
but essentially <i>downwards</i>; the earth and the doings upon it
being the chief object in outlook windows, except of observatories;
and where the object is a distinct and special view
downwards, it will be of advantage to shelter the eye as far as
possible from the rays of light coming from above, and the
head of the window may be left horizontal, or even the whole
aperture sloped outwards, as the slit in a letter-box is inwards.</p>
<p>The best windows for outlook are, of course, oriels and bow
windows, but these are not to be considered under the head
of apertures merely; they are either balconies roofed and
glazed, and to be considered under the head of external appliances,
or they are each a story of an external semi-tower,
having true aperture windows on each side of it.</p>
<p><span class="scs correction" title="added a �">XII.</span> 2. Inlet windows. These windows may, of course, be
of any shape and size whatever, according to the other necessities
of the building, and the quantity and direction of light
desired, their purpose being now to throw it in streams on
particular lines or spots; now to diffuse it everywhere; sometimes
to introduce it in broad masses, tempered in strength, as
in the cathedral colored window; sometimes in starry showers
of scattered brilliancy, like the apertures in the roof of an
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page181"></SPAN>181</span>
Arabian bath; perhaps the most beautiful of all forms being
the rose, which has in it the unity of both characters, and
sympathy with that of the source of light itself. It is noticeable,
however, that while both the circle and pointed oval are
beautiful window forms, it would be very painful
to cut either of them in half and connect
them by vertical lines, as in <SPAN href="#fig_44">Fig. XLIV.</SPAN> The
reason is, I believe, that so treated, the upper
arch is not considered as connected with the
lower, and forming an entire figure, but as the ordinary arch
roof of the aperture, and the lower arch as an arch <i>floor</i>,
equally unnecessary and unnatural. Also, the elliptical oval is
generally an unsatisfactory form, because it gives the idea of
useless trouble in building it, though it occurs quaintly and
pleasantly in the former windows of France: I believe it is also
objectionable because it has an indeterminate, slippery look,
like that of a bubble rising through a fluid. It, and all elongated
forms, are still more objectionable placed horizontally, because
this is the weakest position they can structurally have; that is
to say, less light is admitted, with greater loss of strength to
the building, than by any other form. If admissible anywhere,
it is for the sake of variety at the top of the building,
as the flat parallelogram sometimes not ungracefully in Italian
Renaissance.</p>
<table style="float: right; width: auto;" summary="Illustration">
<tr>
<td class="caption1">Fig. XLIV.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="figright2">
<SPAN name="fig_44"><ANTIMG src="images/img181.jpg" width-obs="120" height-obs="84" alt="Fig. XLIV." title="Fig. XLIV." /></SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><span class="scs">XIII.</span> The question of bevelling becomes a little more
complicated in the inlet than the outlook window, because
the mass or quantity of light admitted is often of more consequence
than its direction, and often <i>vice vers�</i>; and the outlook
window is supposed to be approachable, which is far
from being always the case with windows for light, so that
the bevelling which in the outlook window is chiefly to open
range of sight, is in the inlet a means not only of admitting
the light in greater quantity, but of directing it to the spot
on which it is to fall. But, in general, the bevelling of the
one window will reverse that of the other; for, first, no
natural light will strike on the inlet window from beneath,
unless reflected light, which is (I believe) injurious to the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page182"></SPAN>182</span>
health and the sight; and thus, while in the outlook window
the outside bevel downwards is essential, in the inlet it would
be useless: and the sill is to be flat, if the window be on a
level with the spot it is to light; and sloped downwards
within, if above it. Again, as the brightest rays of light are
the steepest, the outside bevel upwards is as essential in the
roof of the inlet as it was of small importance in that of the
outlook window.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XIV.</span> On the horizontal section the aperture will expand
internally, a somewhat larger number of rays being thus
reflected from the jambs; and the aperture being thus the
smallest possible outside, this is the favorite military form of
inlet window, always found in magnificent development in
the thick walls of medi�val castles and convents. Its effect
is tranquil, but cheerless and dungeon-like in its fullest development,
owing to the limitation of the range of sight in the
outlook, which, if the window be unapproachable, reduces it
to a mere point of light. A modified condition of it, with
some combination of the outlook form, is probably the best
for domestic buildings in general (which, however, in modern
architecture, are unhappily so thin walled, that the outline of
the jambs becomes a matter almost of indifference), it being
generally noticeable that the depth of recess which I have
observed to be essential to nobility of external effect has also
a certain dignity of expression, as appearing to be intended
rather to admit light to persons quietly occupied in their
homes, than to stimulate or favor the curiosity of idleness.</p>
<hr class="foot" />
<div class="note">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_55" href="#FnAnchor_55"><span class="fn">55</span></SPAN> And worth questioning, also, whether the triple porch has not been
associated with Romanist views of mediatorship; the Redeemer being
represented as presiding over the central door only, and the lateral entrances
being under the protection of saints, while the Madonna almost always has
one or both of the transepts. But it would be wrong to press this, for, in
nine cases out of ten, the architect has been merely influenced in his placing
of the statues by an artist’s desire of variety in their forms and dress; and
very naturally prefers putting a canonisation over one door, a martyrdom
over another, and an assumption over a third, to repeating a crucifixion or
a judgment above all. The architect’s doctrine is only, therefore, to be
noted with indisputable reprobation when the Madonna gets possession of
the main door.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_56" href="#FnAnchor_56"><span class="fn">56</span></SPAN> The arch heading is indeed the best where there is much incumbent
weight, but a window frequently has very little weight above it, especially
when placed high, and the arched form loses light in a low room: therefore
the square-headed window is admissible where the square-headed door
is not.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_57" href="#FnAnchor_57"><span class="fn">57</span></SPAN> I do not like the sound of the word “splayed;” I always shall use
“bevelled” instead.</p>
</div>
<hr class="art" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page183"></SPAN>183</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />