Page:Vitruvius the Ten Books on Architecture.djvu/131

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BOOK IV

INTRODUCTION


1. I have observed, Emperor, that many in their treatises and volumes of commentaries on architecture have not presented the subject with well-ordered completeness, but have merely made a beginning and left, as it were, only desultory fragments. I have therefore thought that it would be a worthy and very useful thing to reduce the whole of this great art to a complete and orderly form of presentation, and then in different books to lay down and explain the required characteristics of different departments. Hence, Caesar, in my first book I have set forth to you the func­tion of the architect and the things in which he ought to be trained. In the second I have discussed the supplies of mate­rial of which buildings are constructed. In the third, which deals with the arrangements of temples and their variety of form, I showed the nature and number of their classes, with the adjust­ments proper to each form according to the usage of the Ionic order, one of the three which exhibit the greatest delicacy of pro­portion in their symmetrical measurements. In the present book I shall speak of the established rules for the Doric and Corinthian orders, and shall explain their differences and peculiarities.