I. ARCHITECTURE 27
the figure; but I imagine you have quite enough of them as it is.
“Nay, but,” some of you instantly answer, “if we had been as long accustomed to square-leaved ash trees as we have been to sharp-leaved ash trees, we should like them just as well.” Do not think it. Are you not much more accustomed to grey whinstone and brown sandstone than you are to rubies or emeralds? and yet will you tell me you think them as beautiful? Are you not more accustomed to the ordinary voices of men than to the perfect accents of sweet singing? yet do you not instantly declare the song to be loveliest? Examine well the channels of your admiration, and you will find that they are, in verity, as unchangeable as the channels of your heart’s blood; that just as by the pressure of a bandage, or by unwholesome and perpetual action of some part of the body, that blood may be wasted or arrested, and in its stagnancy cease to nourish the frame, or in its disturbed flow affect it with incurable disease, so also admiration itself may, by the bandages of fashion, bound close over the eyes and the arteries of the soul, be arrested in its natural pulse and healthy flow; but that wherever the artificial pressure is removed, it will return into that bed which has been traced for it by the finger of God.1
10. Consider this subject well, and you will find that custom has indeed no real influence upon our feelings of the beautiful, except in dulling and checking them;2 that is to say, it will and does, as we advance in years, deaden in some degree our enjoyment of all beauty, but it in no wise influences our determination of what is beautiful, and what is not. You see the broad blue sky every day over your heads; but you do not for that reason determine blue to be less or more beautiful than you did at first; you are unaccustomed to see stones as blue as the sapphire,
1 [Exodus xxxi. 18; Deuteronomy ix. 10, etc.]
2 [On the subject of this § 10, compare Modern Painters, vol. ii. sec. i. ch. iv. (Vol. IV. pp. 67-75), and the additional passages from the MS. in the same volume, pp. 365-366.]
[Version 0.04: March 2008]