Hesperian student / (Lincoln [Neb.]) 1872-1885, June 01, 1879, Page 124, Image 4
vu A DKKKNOB OF OATALINE. VOIi. VIII, of conception and vastnoss of thought he. yond all his contemporaries. His images are all characterized by being of that same lofty style. How admirably blended are the frightful ami sublime in that flue work, " The Great Judgment." Rapluul puts his great power into the expression, lla forms are fault', but you lose sight of all this, in seeing the soul looking out from his faces. His greatest work, The Transfiguration," is such, that viewed at a distance, the lower portion seems but darkness, and the upper part brightness; as you approach, it becomes more distinct and you see below, a mass of struggling, helpless humanity, and above, the Christ. Raphicl has been criticized severely, hut his critics are those Avho are about as just as was Voltaire of "that barbarous, imbecile Shakespeare." From 1000 the Homaine stvle began to decline and to merge into what has the irrelevant title of Gothic. Round arches gave way to pointed ones, and by lfiOO, the Gothic was acknowledged throughout Europe. Dining the transition period, cdiliccB appeared as part Romanic and part Gothic, and sometimes could be seen an old Greek building with Round ne pro- jected from one side and finally a mug. nificent Gothic front. As the pointed arch appeared immediately after tho first crusade, there is good reason to believe that the idea was brought by the Crusaders from the Holy Land. Italy was inferior to most of the Euro pean countries in examples of the trans ition from round to pointed arch. The Italians never welcomed the Gothic, but accepted it as a necessity. They were ig norant of its true spirit and so put no life into their work, rarely oven properly fit. ting the arch. mold into the cap. Among them the clustered Hhafts aro almost un known. In France was the pointed arch most highly developed, though not at first ac companied by the ilelicate tracery that makes it so beautiful. Although the Gothic edifices show great elegance ami beauty, it seems hardly appropriate for slender pillars to support enormous mas ses, giving tho building tho air of being upheld by numerous little props. Owing to the thinness of the fine, lacclikc work, the top portion is not as heavy as ono would suppose, but often the idea of the supernatural is carried to excess, and all seems to be out of proportion, and tho im pression left upon the mind is a disagree able one. Ono author says; "Arches sank from poetry to romance, from tho marvellous to tho absurd, when in tho fifteenth century pyramidal forms reversed their spires." This ridicule seems hard ly out of place; hut tho same writer is too severo when ho remarks, " Tho Greek style renders tho brute divine, the Gothic reduces man to beast." Tho Gothic arch ilecturo has been compared to frozen mu sic; and following with tho cyo the fine delicate tracery and rich ornamentations, you see the peculiar fitness at once. There is felt to be a difilculty in rccon cilingthc low moral state of society with this regeneration of art. Tho Christian Church has been so corrupted, that the people unwisely considered grave faults among tho Ecclesiastical order as defects in the system, and so rejected all hitherto fore accepted doctrines. Tho Renaissance was sadly needed then, and one more would bo very welcome if it would reduce our miserably deformed architecture to a system embodying spirit and life and conforming to ordinary ideas of taste. Spiiynx. A DEFKNQE OF GATALIXE. 7JV KT us examine the account handed JLC down to us of the unsuccessful at tempt of Lucius Sergius Catalinc to de liver the Roman Republic from party rule, commonly known to Ciceronian students ns the "Conspiracy of Catalinc," and endeavor to discover the better part of the man, to which the orator lias blind ed us.