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  • March 14, 1863
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  • ON THE ARCH AND ARCADES.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 14, 1863: Page 4

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On The Arch And Arcades.

I am tempted here to ask why so remarkable an instance of the benefit resulting from a combined action in such matters should not suggest the erection of some similar arcade encompassing , or traversing , one of our own parks ? Such a cloister would be a work of signal public utility in a climate such as ours . Now , with regard to the relative proportions which

should be given to an arcade , it does not appear to me that any rule can be laid down rigorously on the subject . Much depends , perhaps I might say all must depend , on the circumstances of each case . Indepently of every consideration of style , the nature and position of the building- would have to be consulted before we could determine whether an elegant lihtness or a grandiose

g stability should characterise it ; and this applies equally to the arches themselves , and to the piers from which they spring . The utmost diversity prevails among oven the finest examples ; and , in truth , it is the facility with which the arcade lends itself to every purpose of our art which is one of the good qualities especially recommending it

to the architect . We have had to vary the proportions of the pier to the arch , and we have at our command the widest extremes of effect . There are pedants in all parsuits , whether in letters or in art ; and our art has , perhaps , more than the sister arts , been the victim of those narrow views which pedantry engenders . We have bad our rules laid down for us with a precision that wonld

lead us to infer that there must be some arithmetical gauge by which we may test all the most subtle questions of taste mart . Thus Milizia determines for us that an arch 12 modules wide should never be less than 23 modules , nor more than 26 modules in height ; and with respect to the piers which support them , that their width should never be more than one-half nor less than two-fifths of the span of the arch . There perhaps may be some use in arbitrary or empirical rules of this nature as helps to the student , but they must ever be regarded as mere rough

approximations , subject to so many modifications , according to circumstances , as to render such rules of very limited applicatiou . For instance , some of the most pleasing examples of Italian arcades that I can call to mind hare their arches springing from single or coupled columns . It is obvious that Milizia's rules are wholly inapplicable in such cases , lb is also obvious that , in determing the

proportion that the arch and j } ier should bear towards each other , it is most important to regard the weight and bulk of the superstructure . To an arcade that has bnt its own weight to carry , a degree of lightness and airiness may be given which would be quite inappropriate when a heavy building surmounts the arcade . It would be iu vain to argue that by the use of marble

or granite , or perhaps iron , the slenderest supports may be rendered adequate to bear even the loftiest and heaviest structures : the prejudices of the eye must be consulted if we would wish to ] 3 lease it . There is but one other detail to which I need now refer , namely , the manner in which the arch is made to bear upon the piers or pillars whichreceive it . This appeal's

, always to have been regarded as a difficulty , demanding the exercise * of more or less ingenuity , especially when the arches sprang from columns . The earliest idea was to make the arches spring from imposts consisting of so many fractional parts of the ordinary continuous entablature of a columnar order . This is , of course , a very easy contrivance , inasmuch as it involves little effort ; the

portion of the entablature between each column had but to be removed and an arch substituted . Yet this easy arrangement had its obvious objections : a stilted , unstable effect is produced , and the cornice returning round over each column has a topheavy appearance—in fact , it converts tnis part of the entablature into a sort of overloaded capital of ciurasy shape . This defect became effectually remedied by the total omission of the entablature , and by making the arch spring directly from the capital of the column . Examples

of this occur so early as Diocletian's Palace , iu Dalmatia and many other instances of the period of the Bassi Tempi . But the incongruity of the square arehivolt resting on the circular shaft , became soon apparent to ths early mediaeval masons , who struggled to invent some intermediate course . Hence arose the use of those blocks which we see on the capitals of columns in the

Lombardic and Byzantine schools . These rude devices are not without merit and originality , and were , at all events , good and sensible pieces of masonic construction . All , however , were abandoned when the facile hand of the Gothic Freemason had learnt to overcome the difficulty by a variety of more or less effective contrivances . At length all further embarrassment was removed by

the total omission of an impost or capital , and the arehivolt mouldings were continued down the vertical sides , uninterrupted by any impost whatever , to mark the springing of the curve . I have addressed to ' you these somewhat miscellaneous and imperfect notices of the arcade , its history and its construction , and its aesthetic meiits , with a view to

invite your attention to what I coiisider one of the most fruitful sources of beauty that our art commands . I would have you study with diligence and with becoming respect the glorious examples that have been bequeathed to us by our predecessors ; for I am not of those who seek to despise or repudiate the authority of precedent , and who thus set at nought the experience of ages . The

self-satisfied who find their vanity gratified by vaunting the superiority of the present over the past—of their own pre-eminence over their forefathers—are precisely the men who do most to check improvement and impede real progress . Yet I would , with equal earnestness , deprecate that blind and unreasoning subjection to precedent—that blank and ignoble perverseness that raises up any given style or any given period into an object of idolatrous worship , at the foot of which every votary

of art must bend the knee and prostrate his own judgment . All such narrow exclusiveness enfeebles and impoverishes the mind , leading to direct imitation , and to a disregard or forgetful ness of the general principles of our art . It should never be overlooked that , in aesthetic as in other matters , we are reasoning creatures , bound to

exercise the judgement with which \ T « are endowed , weak and faulty as it may be , prone to error as it certainly is ; yet such as it is we are bound to listen to the promptings of our reason , for such in truth is the sole ground on which we can claim superiority over all other of God's creatures . We are taught by the highest authority that has been revealed to us for our guidance , that we should

' ' Prove all things , and hold fast by that which is good . " This great dictum was uttered for our spiritual guidance , but it may , I trust , without irreverance , be regarded as teaching artists also a lesson . It tells us to make ourselves as thoroughly acquainted as we can be with all that the past has left for our admiration and instruction in art : and with our minds so edified we are to exercise

the attributes of reason and judgment iu selecting that which is true and good , and rejecting that which , whatever its merits , may appear to us as having become unsuitable or unequal to meet the requirements of the present time . This doctrine may be stigmatised eclectic or latitudinarian , and as encouragement to an indulgence in all

manner of fantastic excesses . Yet I would reply that into whatever amount of error our ineffectual strugg les may lead us , such error would be the result , not of any unsoundness in the doctrine , but of our own weak judgment and of our own insufficient intelligence . Reason and good taste can never be really at variance . If do not take for guidanceto what

we reason our , pyx or star are we to resort for direction ? What test in our art have we , if it be not our sense of what is reasonable . Is tradition to be the test ? Can abstract science furnish us with it ? , Shall fancy supply us with the mete-wand

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1863-03-14, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 3 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_14031863/page/4/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 1
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—LXII. Article 1
NEW MATERIALS FOR THE LIFE OF JOHN BACON. R.A. Article 2
ON THE ARCH AND ARCADES. Article 3
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 5
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 6
THE GRAND LODGE PROPERTY. Article 8
DR. KNIPE, BROS. A. F. A. WOODFORD AND MATTHEW COOKE. Article 8
ST. MARK'S LODGE (No 1159). Article 10
THE MASONIC MIRROR Article 11
METROPOLITAN. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 15
SCOTLAND. Article 15
ROYAL ARCH. Article 17
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 17
Poetry. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

On The Arch And Arcades.

I am tempted here to ask why so remarkable an instance of the benefit resulting from a combined action in such matters should not suggest the erection of some similar arcade encompassing , or traversing , one of our own parks ? Such a cloister would be a work of signal public utility in a climate such as ours . Now , with regard to the relative proportions which

should be given to an arcade , it does not appear to me that any rule can be laid down rigorously on the subject . Much depends , perhaps I might say all must depend , on the circumstances of each case . Indepently of every consideration of style , the nature and position of the building- would have to be consulted before we could determine whether an elegant lihtness or a grandiose

g stability should characterise it ; and this applies equally to the arches themselves , and to the piers from which they spring . The utmost diversity prevails among oven the finest examples ; and , in truth , it is the facility with which the arcade lends itself to every purpose of our art which is one of the good qualities especially recommending it

to the architect . We have had to vary the proportions of the pier to the arch , and we have at our command the widest extremes of effect . There are pedants in all parsuits , whether in letters or in art ; and our art has , perhaps , more than the sister arts , been the victim of those narrow views which pedantry engenders . We have bad our rules laid down for us with a precision that wonld

lead us to infer that there must be some arithmetical gauge by which we may test all the most subtle questions of taste mart . Thus Milizia determines for us that an arch 12 modules wide should never be less than 23 modules , nor more than 26 modules in height ; and with respect to the piers which support them , that their width should never be more than one-half nor less than two-fifths of the span of the arch . There perhaps may be some use in arbitrary or empirical rules of this nature as helps to the student , but they must ever be regarded as mere rough

approximations , subject to so many modifications , according to circumstances , as to render such rules of very limited applicatiou . For instance , some of the most pleasing examples of Italian arcades that I can call to mind hare their arches springing from single or coupled columns . It is obvious that Milizia's rules are wholly inapplicable in such cases , lb is also obvious that , in determing the

proportion that the arch and j } ier should bear towards each other , it is most important to regard the weight and bulk of the superstructure . To an arcade that has bnt its own weight to carry , a degree of lightness and airiness may be given which would be quite inappropriate when a heavy building surmounts the arcade . It would be iu vain to argue that by the use of marble

or granite , or perhaps iron , the slenderest supports may be rendered adequate to bear even the loftiest and heaviest structures : the prejudices of the eye must be consulted if we would wish to ] 3 lease it . There is but one other detail to which I need now refer , namely , the manner in which the arch is made to bear upon the piers or pillars whichreceive it . This appeal's

, always to have been regarded as a difficulty , demanding the exercise * of more or less ingenuity , especially when the arches sprang from columns . The earliest idea was to make the arches spring from imposts consisting of so many fractional parts of the ordinary continuous entablature of a columnar order . This is , of course , a very easy contrivance , inasmuch as it involves little effort ; the

portion of the entablature between each column had but to be removed and an arch substituted . Yet this easy arrangement had its obvious objections : a stilted , unstable effect is produced , and the cornice returning round over each column has a topheavy appearance—in fact , it converts tnis part of the entablature into a sort of overloaded capital of ciurasy shape . This defect became effectually remedied by the total omission of the entablature , and by making the arch spring directly from the capital of the column . Examples

of this occur so early as Diocletian's Palace , iu Dalmatia and many other instances of the period of the Bassi Tempi . But the incongruity of the square arehivolt resting on the circular shaft , became soon apparent to ths early mediaeval masons , who struggled to invent some intermediate course . Hence arose the use of those blocks which we see on the capitals of columns in the

Lombardic and Byzantine schools . These rude devices are not without merit and originality , and were , at all events , good and sensible pieces of masonic construction . All , however , were abandoned when the facile hand of the Gothic Freemason had learnt to overcome the difficulty by a variety of more or less effective contrivances . At length all further embarrassment was removed by

the total omission of an impost or capital , and the arehivolt mouldings were continued down the vertical sides , uninterrupted by any impost whatever , to mark the springing of the curve . I have addressed to ' you these somewhat miscellaneous and imperfect notices of the arcade , its history and its construction , and its aesthetic meiits , with a view to

invite your attention to what I coiisider one of the most fruitful sources of beauty that our art commands . I would have you study with diligence and with becoming respect the glorious examples that have been bequeathed to us by our predecessors ; for I am not of those who seek to despise or repudiate the authority of precedent , and who thus set at nought the experience of ages . The

self-satisfied who find their vanity gratified by vaunting the superiority of the present over the past—of their own pre-eminence over their forefathers—are precisely the men who do most to check improvement and impede real progress . Yet I would , with equal earnestness , deprecate that blind and unreasoning subjection to precedent—that blank and ignoble perverseness that raises up any given style or any given period into an object of idolatrous worship , at the foot of which every votary

of art must bend the knee and prostrate his own judgment . All such narrow exclusiveness enfeebles and impoverishes the mind , leading to direct imitation , and to a disregard or forgetful ness of the general principles of our art . It should never be overlooked that , in aesthetic as in other matters , we are reasoning creatures , bound to

exercise the judgement with which \ T « are endowed , weak and faulty as it may be , prone to error as it certainly is ; yet such as it is we are bound to listen to the promptings of our reason , for such in truth is the sole ground on which we can claim superiority over all other of God's creatures . We are taught by the highest authority that has been revealed to us for our guidance , that we should

' ' Prove all things , and hold fast by that which is good . " This great dictum was uttered for our spiritual guidance , but it may , I trust , without irreverance , be regarded as teaching artists also a lesson . It tells us to make ourselves as thoroughly acquainted as we can be with all that the past has left for our admiration and instruction in art : and with our minds so edified we are to exercise

the attributes of reason and judgment iu selecting that which is true and good , and rejecting that which , whatever its merits , may appear to us as having become unsuitable or unequal to meet the requirements of the present time . This doctrine may be stigmatised eclectic or latitudinarian , and as encouragement to an indulgence in all

manner of fantastic excesses . Yet I would reply that into whatever amount of error our ineffectual strugg les may lead us , such error would be the result , not of any unsoundness in the doctrine , but of our own weak judgment and of our own insufficient intelligence . Reason and good taste can never be really at variance . If do not take for guidanceto what

we reason our , pyx or star are we to resort for direction ? What test in our art have we , if it be not our sense of what is reasonable . Is tradition to be the test ? Can abstract science furnish us with it ? , Shall fancy supply us with the mete-wand

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