the column and its entablature, borrowed of course
from Greece, and base upon it the plagiarism of
Roman art. The Romans were essentially a political
people, adapting and assimilating with the highest
genius everything and anything with which they
came in contact — in politics, in religion, in art, and
all the spheres of life, seizing upon every new ele-
ment, and transforming it till welded into the iron
whole which it was their glory to have impressed upon
the then known world. As such Rome paved the
way for the modern world ; as such she looks forward
to the West and the future, turning her back on
Greece and the past.
For Greece, on the other hand, is to be regarded
as essentially the culminating point of ancient
Oriental art, the liigliest expression of the East.
The whole tendency of modern research has been to
prove more and more intimately her affinity with
Egypt and Assyria. Everything she took she
touched with a magic that has left us nothing but
masterpieces, but we must admit it was taken, not
invented. The Doric column, for example, came to
her from Egypt, the Ionic and Corinthian from
Asia Minor. The old idea that the Greeks evolved
all out of their own inner consciousness in isolation
is now an exploded theory.
A keynote to this divergence, one might almost
say this antagonism, between Greece and Rome is
struck at once on observing their use and treatment
of floral ornamentation. In Greece flower and
plant decoration is always conventional, and treated
after a set scheme ; there is little play of varied
sm-faces, all are reduced to a uniform level ; the
outline is formal and precise ; there is no under-
cutting; at most there is but a reminiscence of
natural forms, often it is quite lost. Such a treat-
ment is closely allied to Eastern decoration, both
ancient, and again in Byzantine and Mohammedan
art, but it is as far as possible removed from Rome.
With the Romans all is realistic, unconventional,
full of the complicated lines of nature ; the plant
forms are modelled naturally, full of fibre and
substance ; the whole treatment bears the closest
analogy to the exquisite study of nature which
readied its highest perfection in Gothic art.
In the structure of the buildings, however, this
radical difference is seen in its deepest significance
and widest bearings. And it is from the structural
point of view that Rome is claimed as belonging to
the new world, Greece to the old.
If we take structure as a basis, all architecture
may be classified under two great heads — the first
containing trilithic or trabeate buildings, from Stone-
henge, the rudimentary type, to Beni Hassan and
Persepolis, and the Acropolis, its culminating point.
In all the principle of construction is the same, two
posts and a lintel, or two columns and an architrave,
and no attempt is made to separate or distinguish
the various mechanical forces called into play. We
may call this class the synthetical, if we want an abs-
tract name, to distinguish it from the analytical, the
second great class, in which the forces are resolved and
severally counterbalanced. In this the various ele-
ments constituting the constructive skeleton of the
building are definitely and duly considered, and a
system of equipoise is the result. The culminating
point of this architecture is reached in the so-called
Gothic Period, the Christian architecture of the
thirteentli century. But its starting-point is Rome,
which here has nothing in common with Greece.
S. H. Capper.
JAPANESE SWORD-GUARDS.
FROM the earliest times the leisure of peace has
been largely spent in perfecting the implements
of war, and while the power and glory of a nation
were measured by its success in battle, naturally the
warriors' arms received much consideration, and the
great chiefs would have the right to call upon the
beautifiers of things to work their wonders upon the
sword and shield. For the craftsman in metal-work
particularly the field of keenest competition has been
the decoration of arms, and the skill and invention
with which it has been contested on the sword alone
has not been surpassed in the making of any other
instrument.
With the advent of gunpowder it may be said the
glory of the sword departed. It is now but a big
knife manufactured on a common model for a
purpose almost universally regarded, as barbarous.
Customs change, but true beauty is constant ; joy in
the sword lias gone, but the fine workmanship which
it called forth remains, and there is something
significant in the fact that the sword is prized for
its once subordinate beauty- — the product of loving
skill in times of peace. As remarkable examples of
the art that was lavished on this weapon in the old
days, when it held the first line of defence, I would
draw attention to antique Japanese sword-guards.
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JAPANESE SWORD-GUARDS
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