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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51001 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51001)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mentor: Beautiful Buildings of the
-World, Serial no. 33, by Clarence Ward
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Mentor: Beautiful Buildings of the World, Serial no. 33
-
-Author: Clarence Ward
-
-Release Date: January 22, 2016 [EBook #51001]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MENTOR: BEAUTIFUL BUILDINGS OF WORLD ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Karin Spence and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE MENTOR
-
- "A Wise and Faithful Guide and Friend"
-
- Vol. I No. 33
-
-
-
-
- BEAUTIFUL BUILDINGS of the WORLD
-
- TAJ MAHAL SALISBURY CATHEDRAL
-
- THE ALHAMBRA [Illustration] CHÂTEAU de CHAMBORD
-
- AMIENS CATHEDRAL NEW YORK CITY HALL
-
- _By CLARENCE WARD_
- _Professor of Architecture, Rutgers College_
-
-
-Beauty in architecture is as difficult to define as beauty in nature.
-No single factor renders a building beautiful. Size and proportion,
-style and decoration, age and setting, all enter into account. And
-moreover there is the power a building possesses to appeal to the
-ideals of the beholder, to his mind as well as to his sight and touch.
-Even when judged from this broad viewpoint, the number of beautiful
-buildings in the world is legion. It would be impossible to point to
-anyone as the finest, or even to select a dozen without leaving a dozen
-more that were equally beautiful. Every age, and every nation, has left
-to us some crowning achievements of the builder's art. The following
-are therefore merely selections from this storehouse, illustrating to
-some degree the wealth of architectural treasures that is our heritage.
-
-Few if any buildings in the world have been the subject of such praise
-as that bestowed upon the Taj Mahal ("Gem of Buildings"). Travelers,
-painters, authors, and poets have all sought to express in word or
-color the indefinable charm of this gem of Indian art. Built at Agra,
-in India, by the great mogul of Delhi, Shah Jahan, as a tomb for his
-favorite wife, Mumtaz Mahal, the Taj is a veritable translation into
-stone of human remembrance and affection. It was begun in 1632, and
-was completed in twenty-two years. The material of which it is built
-is pure white marble, and inlaid in its walls are jaspers, agates, and
-other stones in marvelous designs. But it is perhaps the dome that
-gives the greatest beauty to this tomb. Of typical Eastern shape, it
-rises a mass of white against the deep blue of the Indian sky, or
-shines like silver in the radiance of the Indian moon.
-
- [Illustration: THE TAJ MAHAL
-
-_The approach through the splendid gardens seen in the foreground is
-bordered by dark cypress trees, which contrast admirably with the color
-of the marble domes beyond._]
-
-
- THE WORLD'S MOST BEAUTIFUL TOMB
-
-It cannot be denied that the Taj Mahal (tahzh mah-hahl´) owes much
-of its beauty to its setting. Not merely has it the contrast of the
-brilliant sky above, but also the deep green of the gardens at its
-feet, and more than this the four tall, graceful minarets standing
-like sentinels at the corners of the marble terrace on which the tomb
-is placed. The interior is scarcely less impressive than this outside
-view. Its subdued light serves only to show more clearly the beauty
-of the garlands of red and blue and green inlaid along its walls as
-never-withering memorials of the queen who sleeps beneath the lofty
-dome.
-
-It is perhaps beside her tomb that the traveler sees a vision of the
-proud and mighty Jahan, cruel in many ways, but steadfast in his love,
-building this glorious resting place for his fair consort, whom he
-called by the familiar name of Taj. One may see even farther still and
-picture to himself this once proud ruler, bereft of all his power and
-even of his throne, looking out from his chamber window toward this
-same Taj Mahal. Perhaps its wondrous dome gleamed in the moonlight on
-that last night before he came to rest beneath its shades as it gleams
-today to the enraptured gaze of thousands who take the pilgrimage to
-Agra to see this wonder of the Eastern world.
-
-
- THE PALACE OF THE MOORISH KINGS
-
-It is not such a step as it may seem from the Taj Mahal to the Alhambra
-(al-ham'-bra). Both are oriental. Both are the products of Mohammedan
-art, and mark in a way its Eastern and its Western expressions. As
-early as the eighth century of our era the Moors of northern Africa
-crossed to Spain and made the Iberian peninsula a Moorish califate
-or kingdom. Its capital and last stronghold was Granada. And here on
-a lofty hill, overlooking the city, King or Calif Al Hamar began the
-mighty fortress of the Alhambra in the early years of the thirteenth
-century.
-
- [Illustration: COURT OF THE MYRTLES, ALHAMBRA
- _The pool is bordered on both sides by beautiful old hedges._]
-
-As is the case with almost every Mohammedan building, its exterior
-is extremely plain. But once the door is passed one seems to have
-stepped from Europe to the Orient. Courtyards and porticos, halls and
-passages, open before the visitor in a truly oriental maze of color and
-decoration. The first important court is known as that of the Myrtles.
-In its center is a marble basin a hundred and thirty feet long,
-bordered with trees of myrtle and orange, and flanked at both ends by
-two-storied pavilions with slender marble shafts and graceful Moorish
-arches. From one of these pavilions opens the Hall of the Ambassadors,
-the throne room of the califs, and the largest chamber in the palace.
-
-
- THE ALHAMBRA'S BEAUTY
-
-But it is not its size that makes this room imposing. Here, as
-elsewhere in the palace, it is the decoration. Rising for three or
-four feet from the floor is a band of colored Moorish tiles. All the
-wall above is of stucco, molded in lacelike patterns and painted
-in blues and reds and brilliant golden yellows. The designs are
-largely geometrical or floral, frequently interspersed with Arabic
-inscriptions. Some of these when translated read, "God is our refuge,"
-"Praise be to God," familiar phrases in Mohammedan faith, or "There is
-no conqueror but God." Add to this decoration of the walls imposing
-stalactite domes, and ceilings often of cedarwood inlaid with mother of
-pearl, and imagine the floors and windows again adorned with oriental
-rugs and hangings, and the beauty of the Alhambra will be easily
-understood.
-
- [Illustration: HALL OF REPOSE OF THE BATHS, ALHAMBRA]
-
- [Illustration: THE GATE OF JUSTICE
- _A part of the Alhambra palace not well preserved._]
-
-But neither the Court of the Myrtles nor the Hall of the Ambassadors
-is the crowning glory of the palace. This honor belongs to the Court
-of the Lions. One hundred and sixteen by sixty-six feet in size, this
-court compares with any apartment in the world for pure, exquisite
-beauty of design. An open portico, its ceiling borne on a hundred
-and twenty-four slender and beautiful marble columns and delicately
-ornamented arches, incloses the central space, in the middle of which
-rises a magnificent fountain, its basin cut from a single giant block
-of alabaster, and supported on the backs of twelve lions of white
-marble, emblems of courage and strength.
-
- [Illustration: INTERIOR OF THE ALHAMBRA
- _Arched window in the "Tower of the Captivity of Isabel."_]
-
-It is small wonder that the last of the Moorish kings, Boabdil
-(bo-ahb-deel´), looked back with many tears at this glorious palace as
-he surrendered it in 1492 to his Christian conqueror Ferdinand. Sadly
-indeed he and his followers must have crossed again to the dreary
-deserts of Africa, since they left behind them the whole fair land of
-Spain, which they had adorned not merely with the Alhambra, but with
-the Alcázar at Seville, the mosque at Cordova, and other monuments of
-their civil and religious greatness.
-
-
- THE GREAT CATHEDRALS
-
-At the very period when the Mohammedan conquerors of Spain were
-building their palace of the Alhambra, the Christians of northern
-France were erecting those vast cathedrals which stand today as
-the crowning achievements of the builder's art. Paris, Chartres
-(shahrtr), Bourges (boorzh), Rheims (reemz), Rouen (roo-ong´), Le Mans
-(lee-mong´), Beauvais (bo-vay´) and Amiens (ah-mee-ong´) are but a
-few of the long list of French Gothic cathedrals of the twelfth and
-thirteenth centuries. From such a list it is most difficult to choose.
-Each one has its distinctive claim to recognition, and its distinctive
-features which are not surpassed in any of the others. This fact,
-indeed, has caused it to be said that the ideal cathedral should have
-the façade of Rheims, the spires of Chartres, the nave of Amiens, and
-the choir of Beauvais. But even such an ideal cathedral would not
-be perfect without the addition of features from each of the other
-churches in our list.
-
-Since, however, it is necessary to choose, let us choose Amiens; for
-perhaps this church is most widely acknowledged as the finest example
-of the Gothic style. Its façade is a masterpiece of decoration. Three
-deeply recessed portals in the lower story are covered with a wealth
-of sculptured figures in the round and in relief. Bible lessons and
-the events of human life and history, carved here in stone, taught the
-terrors of sin and hell and the joys of a godly life as preached in
-the church beyond these lofty doors. Nor is the decoration confined to
-sculpture; for the whole façade, and in fact the entire church, is a
-tracery of stone.
-
-
- THE GOTHIC GLORY OF AMIENS
-
- [Illustration: SOUTH PORTAL OF AMIENS CATHEDRAL
-
-_The statue of the Virgin which stands in the portal replaces that of
-St. Honoré, which was moved to the north transept. The carvings about
-the south portal are taken from the life of St. Honoré._]
-
- [Illustration: NAVE OF AMIENS CATHEDRAL]
-
-It is from a side view, however, that Amiens shows at its best the true
-glory of Gothic architecture. Nearly five hundred feet long and over
-two hundred feet to the ridge line of the roof, it rises high above the
-buildings of the city in which it stands, a symbol of the supremacy
-of spiritual over earthly things. To be sure it has its faults. The
-towers are too low and the central spire is of awkward shape; but the
-huge windows, with their tracery in geometric patterns, occupying the
-entire space between the buttresses, and these buttresses themselves
-with their soaring arches spanning the aisle roofs below, afford an
-unsurpassed example of beauty of design combined with the utmost
-structural daring. Moreover, the interior is even more imposing. Lofty
-piers and pointed arches separate the nave from the aisles. Slender
-shafts carry the ribs of the huge vaults of stone forty-three feet in
-span, which seem suspended in air one hundred and forty feet from the
-pavement below. In the support of these vaults lies the keynote of
-Gothic architecture. Though they seem hung as if by magic over walls
-of glass, with very little masonry for their support, their weight and
-thrust are borne by the sweeping arcs of the exterior flying buttresses
-and the huge piers of masonry from which they rise beyond the side
-aisle walls. Viewed from a central point, the majestic sweep of the
-nave, the soaring height of the eastern apse, the wondrous window of
-the northern transept, and the maze of piers and arches and chapels,
-all unite to produce a glorious whole which cannot be surpassed in any
-monument of any age.
-
-
- SALISBURY'S SIMPLE BEAUTY
-
- [Illustration: SALISBURY CATHEDRAL
- _A view from the northeast, showing plainly the double-cross shape of
- the foundation._]
-
- [Illustration: NAVE OF SALISBURY CATHEDRAL
- _A number of interesting monuments were placed between the columns by
- James Wyatt._]
-
-If the interior of Amiens personifies in the highest degree the majesty
-and glory of Christian faith, the spire of Salisbury may be said to
-embody its hope and aspiration. Rising four hundred and four feet from
-the ground, this spire has few to rival it in all the world. Other
-cathedrals might dispute its claim to first place among spires; but
-none is set upon a church so fine. That Salisbury is the most beautiful
-cathedral in England is not claimed. As was the case in France, so
-here, there are too many churches, each with its own distinctive
-points of beauty, for anyone to be the finest of them all.
-
-But Salisbury at least must find a place among the first, and is
-especially interesting because it is exactly contemporary as to date
-with Amiens in France. Architecturally both are Gothic; yet the
-difference in design is as great as the distance in miles between
-them. Low instead of lofty, with little decoration, and set in the
-midst of nature's grass and trees instead of in a crowded city,
-Salisbury's appeal is through the quiet beauty of its line, and the
-simplicity of its construction in contrast to the complex structure
-of the French cathedral. The Gothic of England was rarely the Gothic
-of carefully balanced thrust and pressures, of flying buttresses and
-huge window spaces. Here at Salisbury the walls are still quite heavy
-and the windows only moderately large. They have no tracery of stone;
-but are simple, narrow openings in the walls, with pointed heads so
-like a lance in shape that they have given the name of Lancet to this
-period of English Gothic architecture. Slow to throw off their earlier
-traditions, the English builders clung, even in Gothic days, to many
-of the characteristics of the Norman era, which had produced such
-masterpieces as Durham and Peterborough, Ely and Norwich, cathedrals.
-The result of this is especially evident in the interior of Salisbury;
-for here, in spite of the shafts of Purbeck marble, one for each hour
-in the year, and in spite of the rich moldings of the piers and arches,
-the lack of structural unity, and the comparative smallness of the
-windows and lowness of the vaulting cause Salisbury's nave to fall far
-short of that of Amiens in beauty of construction. Viewed from the
-west, the cathedral is also disappointing; for the façade is an ugly
-screen wall, badly decorated, and deserving of little praise. But when
-seen from north or south or east, with its spire rising from the very
-heart of the church, Salisbury is truly inspiring. In its quiet close
-it seems the very expression of the church at peace.
-
-
- CHÂTEAU de CHAMBORD
-
- [Illustration: CHÂTEAU de CHAMBORD
- _Showing the Mansard roof put on by the celebrated architect, Mansart,
- at the order of Louis XIV, to accommodate a large court._]
-
- [Illustration: HALL IN THE CHÂTEAU de CHAMBORD
- _The two stairways seen in the back wind around the same central shaft
- and never join._]
-
-Between the construction of Amiens and Salisbury and the building of
-the Château of Chambord (shong-bore´) lie two centuries of history.
-In them the spiritual power of the church, and the temporal power of
-the pope and clergy, which had been supreme throughout the Middle
-Ages, gave way to a large extent to a spirit of individualism and a
-rising power on the part of the king and nobles. This change had its
-effect upon the arts. The palace took precedence over the church in
-architecture as the secular took precedence over the religious in
-painting and the other arts. The Château of Chambord dates from the
-earlier stages of this new architectural era. Built by King Francis
-I in the early years of the sixteenth century, it is but one of the
-hundreds of châteaux erected by the kings and nobles of France, from
-Francis to the fall of the monarchy. Its architectural style is what is
-known as early Renaissance. The claim of Chambord to beauty is due,
-not so much to its decoration as to its imposing size, to the sense of
-spaciousness it conveys, and to the manner in which it reflects the
-spirit of its age.
-
-Four hundred feet square along its outer walls, this vast château was
-designed by Francis I merely as a hunting seat. The chief exterior
-attraction of the building lies in its roof. This is a very maze of
-gables, dormers, chimneys, and cupolas, dominated by the lantern that
-crowns the center stair, and in which lights were hung to guide belated
-hunters from the forest.
-
-
- THE STAIRWAY OF CHAMBORD
-
- [Illustration: TOWER OF THE GRAND STAIRCASE
- _Château de Chambord._]
-
-This stairway is the chief attraction of the interior. Sweeping round
-a central newel which forms an open well, it rises the full height of
-the building. Moreover, it is not a single flight of steps, but two,
-so placed that one person may go up and one come down, yet never meet.
-From this stairway four large halls open at every floor, and four
-hundred and forty rooms and fifty other stairs fill up the wings of
-this great palace. The interior, when richly furnished, must have been
-magnificent.
-
-In spite of its size, Chambord has little history of which to boast.
-Nothing of importance or even of special interest took place there.
-
-
- NEW YORK CITY HALL
-
- [Illustration: STAIRWAY IN THE NEW YORK CITY HALL.]
-
-We are fortunate indeed as a nation to have had in our earlier days an
-architecture that could boast of such pleasing monuments as the New
-York City Hall. Our ancestors in both the North and South were strongly
-influenced from the point of view of art by that English Renaissance
-which reached its culmination in the hands of Sir Christopher
-Wren. Many a New England church and many a Southern home boasts
-an architectural beauty of rare charm and in rare accord with the
-natural setting of this new land. Nor were we less fortunate in public
-works. The old and new statehouses in Boston, Independence Hall in
-Philadelphia, and the Capitol in Washington are but a few of the early
-buildings in America that, like the New York City Hall, are worthy to
-rank among the best in beauty of design. The latter was the work of
-John McComb, Jr., and was built between 1803 and 1812 in a style based
-largely upon the Italian Renaissance. Though not of very great size,
-its proportions are remarkably fine, and its architecture beautiful.
-For good taste and for excellence of workmanship it is as worthy of the
-city of millions today as of the city of thousands for which it was
-first built.
-
- [Illustration: OLD COLONIAL CHAMBER
- _The office of the Borough President of Manhattan in New York City
- Hall._]
-
-That the source of beauty in architecture is indefinable, this brief
-account of six of the world's finest buildings has clearly shown.
-No two are alike; yet all are beautiful. And this quality lies not
-merely in size and proportions, in design and decoration, but in the
-appeal that each one makes to the mind as well as to the eye. Thus
-the Taj Mahal fairly speaks of human remembrance, the Alhambra is the
-embodiment of oriental luxury, Amiens affords a majestic picture of
-religious power, and Salisbury of quiet Christian worship, Chambord
-conjures up visions of gay kings and courtiers, while New York in its
-City Hall possesses a worthy monument of civic interest and pride. Many
-another building could be added to such a list as ours, and in the case
-of each it would be found that added to its visible and tangible beauty
-was an invisible character that marked it above its fellows. It is from
-this broad standpoint that all architecture should be judged.
-
- [Footnote: SUPPLEMENTARY READING:--"History of Architecture," Hamlin;
- "Indian and Eastern Architecture," Fergusson; "Medieval Architecture,"
- Porter; "Handbook of English Cathedrals," Van Rensselaer; "Renaissance
- Architecture in France," Blomfield.]
-
-
-
-
- THE MENTOR
-
- ISSUED SEMI-MONTHLY BY
-
- The Mentor Association, Inc.
-
- 381 Fourth Ave., New York, N. Y.
-
- Volume I Number 33
-
- ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION, FOUR DOLLARS. SINGLE COPIES TWENTY CENTS.
- FOREIGN POSTAGE, SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS EXTRA. CANADIAN POSTAGE, FIFTY
- CENTS EXTRA. ENTERED AT THE POST OFFICE AT NEW YORK, N. Y., AS
- SECOND-CLASS MATTER. COPYRIGHT, 1913, BY THE MENTOR ASSOCIATION,
- INC. PRESIDENT, THOMAS H. BECK; VICE-PRESIDENT, WALTER P. TEN EYCK;
- SECRETARY, W. D. MOFFAT; TREASURER, J. S. CAMPBELL; ASST. TREASURER
- AND ASST. SECRETARY, H. A. CROWE.
-
-
- _Editorial_
-
-A man much occupied in his business was asked how he came to know so
-much on so many different subjects. His answer was: "Not by study--I
-have had no time for that--I have got my knowledge from the men who
-could give it to me, and from the reading that they have suggested to
-me. When several of my friends who know a subject have told me about
-it, I have got it in a way that I could not get in study. I have got it
-from different points of view."
-
- ***
-
-These words were said in the course of a conversation about The
-Mentor. Someone had referred to the variety of subjects offered in
-the schedule of The Mentor Association, and had asked whether certain
-regular courses of reading could not be included with advantage. With
-the thought of that business man and others like him, we are aiming
-for something larger and more beneficial than a fixed set of reading
-courses. We have planned to give in The Mentor the broad, liberal
-knowledge that comes not from a strict course of study closely adhered
-to, but from contact with writers of authority in varied fields. The
-readers of The Mentor get the rich benefits afforded by many minds, and
-the year's reading is wide in its reach and well balanced.
-
-So much for the general plan of The Mentor Association. But there is
-something to be said for the reader who wants to have a logical course
-of reading through the seasons. So while we offer variety from week to
-week, we plan to cover the larger subjects in groups of articles that
-are definitely related to each other.
-
- ***
-
-If one wants to follow out a certain subject, whether it be travel,
-history, or art, he can take up the reading of his Mentors in groups.
-Look at the schedule of 1913. In the varied program of the year's
-reading you will detect numbers that naturally belong together. You can
-select a set of Mentors that will take you on a trip to interesting
-places, with Mr. Dwight L. Elmendorf as a companion. If literature is a
-subject of interest to you, you can select Mentors on literary matters
-prepared under the advice of, and some of them written by, Mr. Hamilton
-W. Mabie. Suppose that history is what you are after; Professor Albert
-Bushnell Hart gives you the "Story of America" in several numbers.
-It is hardly necessary to point out what Professor John C. Van Dyke
-has done for fine art in the numbers of The Mentor prepared under his
-direction. And so groups of Mentors on other subjects may be brought
-together out of the schedule.
-
- ***
-
-In preparing the schedule for 1914 we have taken thought not only for
-the wide scope of the whole year's plan, but for the treatment of
-special subjects in a way that will form natural groups. We have found
-this condition has met with favor, and it seems worth while to assure
-ourselves that all the readers of The Mentor appreciate it. We are
-told that some are gathering the numbers relating to a single subject
-together so as to have a small library on each subject available for
-reference. Not a bad idea. Imagine what an attractive set of volumes
-could be made out of twenty or thirty Mentors on travel by Mr.
-Elmendorf! Think what a beautiful and valuable set of books could be
-had by binding up the art numbers! Keep your back numbers. They are
-just as valuable as the ones to come.
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: THE TAJ MAHAL]
-
- _Taj Mahal_
-
- ONE
-
-At the top of a precipice overhanging the River Jumna in India stands
-the most poetic mausoleum in the world. The Taj Mahal, "a dream in
-marble, designed by Titans and finished by jewelers," is the tomb built
-by Shah Jahan, the Mogul emperor, for his wife Mumtaz Mahal, whom he
-called Taj-Bibi. She was the loveliest beauty of the Indies, and Shah
-Jahan loved her so passionately that he thought of no other woman while
-she lived and was lost in grief after her death. He vowed that her tomb
-should be the most beautiful building in the world.
-
-The Taj is of snow-white marble outside and jeweled mosaic within. It
-was planned by a Persian, Ustad Isa, who designed in the Persian rather
-than the Indian style of architecture. Twenty thousand men worked
-twenty-two years to finish it. In the center of a great square, paved
-with white marble and having a slender tower of the same stone at each
-corner, rises the memorial of Taj-Bibi--not merely a masterpiece of
-architecture, but also a perfect interpretation of womanly nature. The
-spirit of Mumtaz Mahal seems to have been carved into the marble.
-
-The mosaic work of the interior is the finest to be found in any
-eastern country. Precious stones are used unsparingly--jasper and
-agate, carnelian and chalcedony. Marble lacework of wonderful lightness
-screens the windows and doorways. In the center are the tombs of Mumtaz
-Mahal and Shah Jahan; but their bodies, according to the Indian custom,
-lie in a vault beneath the building. Shah Jahan had begun a tomb for
-himself on the opposite side of the river, which he never finished
-because Aurantzeb, his son, rebelled against him and took away the
-empire. He was therefore buried by the side of his beloved wife.
-
-Shah Jahan was a cold and haughty man; but he ruled India well, and
-his pride was softened in later life by the death of his wife. It is
-said that during his reign he brought India peace and prosperity by
-putting all his rivals to death. Besides the Taj Mahal, two other
-famous buildings, the Pearl Mosque at Agra and the great mosque of
-Delhi, which were built by Shah Jahan, have made his reign one of the
-most memorable in Indian history. The emperor's treasury must have been
-practically unlimited; for the peacock throne, made during his reign,
-was estimated by Tavernier to be worth sixty million dollars. The
-festival at his coronation alone cost eight millions.
-
-There is a legend that when he had finished the Taj Mahal, Shah Jahan
-ordered the architect to be thrown over the cliff into the River Jumna,
-for fear he might plan another building as beautiful as the Taj.
-
- [Footnote: PREPARED BY THE EDITORIAL STAFF OF THE MENTOR ASSOCIATION
- ILLUSTRATION FOR THE MENTOR. VOL. I, No. 33. SERIAL No. 33 COPYRIGHT.
- 1913. BY THE MENTOR ASSOCIATION. INC.]
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: THE ALHAMBRA--COURT OF THE LIONS]
-
- _The Alhambra_
-
- TWO
-
-The people about Granada have always held that the Palace of the
-Alhambra was built under a magic spell. To their minds human
-workmanship and the power of wealth are too feeble for the erection of
-a structure so enduring and magnificent. Indeed, great architects can
-hardly conceive the skill that balanced those halls and gardens and
-towers one against the other with perfect symmetry, or the patience
-that worked out each interlaced design without error in either the art
-or the chiseling.
-
-Pains and expense were not spared in the construction, and it is no
-wonder that the Spaniards should have thought the work supernatural.
-Slim pillars of the rarest white marble give grace to every court
-of the palace. The carvings and designs are everywhere gilded, and
-where these are painted between the gilding, blue, red, and yellow,
-the purest colors only are used. The blue is ultramarine, made from a
-precious stone, the lapis lazuli of the Egyptians, which never fades.
-
-Besides warmth of color and grace of form, the Moorish architects
-worked for durability. The aqueducts they built still bring an abundant
-supply of water from the mountains to fill those baths, fountains and
-marble-bordered ponds for which the courts and gardens of the Alhambra
-are famous. In spite of earth-quakes the columns and arches have nearly
-all held their place and their perfect form. The palace that Charles
-V built there in a vain effort to rival the Moorish masterpiece, and
-for which he made room by removing part of the Alhambra palace, stands
-today an uncompleted and roofless ruin; while the much older Alhambra
-is still clothed in a glory of bright, fresh color.
-
-The Alhambra is not one building, but a collection of buildings on
-a high plateau. Long before the erection of the great palace the
-hilltop was surrounded by a wall with many towers for defense, and the
-Alcazaba, the first palace built on the Alhambra hill, was used as a
-residence by the early kings of Granada. Older than all, the "Vermilion
-Towers" stand on a neighboring hill, some distance outside the now
-ruined Alhambra wall.
-
-The Palace of the Alhambra is said to have been started by Mohammed:
-but the foundations were probably laid by Calif Al Hamar, who is also
-distinguished for having begun to pay a yearly tribute to the kings
-of Castile. The construction went on during several reigns, and was
-completed by Yusuf with the building of the Gate of Justice in 1348.
-All the later kings of Granada lived in it until 1492, when the Moorish
-power fell before Ferdinand and Isabella, and Boabdil was banished
-forever from the home of his fathers.
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: AMIENS CATHEDRAL]
-
- _Amiens Cathedral_
-
- THREE
-
-It was at Amiens that the renowned Saint Martin gave half of his cloak
-to a beggar who stood shivering by the roadside. Other saints in that
-city, though we know less of their life histories, must have exercised
-even more generosity during the Middle Ages to build and rebuild the
-old cathedral in the face of repeated misfortune. The patience and zeal
-with which those men of Amiens raised up their cathedral four times
-from its ashes, remain forever in the fame of this most perfect of
-French Gothic churches.
-
-When the Norsemen plundered the coast of France in 881 they sent
-a great fleet up the River Somme. Amiens, taken by surprise, fell
-before the attack of those reckless and powerful old Vikings, and the
-cathedral, then a flimsy wooden structure, was burned to the ground.
-A new building which the people of Amiens put up in the same place
-when they had sufficiently recovered from the losses of the invasion,
-was destroyed by lightning in 1019. The next structure was burned in
-1107, and the one that replaced it was struck by lightning in 1218 and
-completely ruined. Then in 1220 the present cathedral was begun. Even
-that has not escaped entirely from the lightning and conflagration that
-had wrecked so many structures on the same spot. In 1258, before the
-work was completed, the woodwork caught fire, and was so badly charred
-that part of it had to be taken down and rebuilt. Traces of fire may
-still be seen on some of the arches. Later the slim central spire,
-which is one of the striking features of Amiens Cathedral, was so badly
-damaged by lightning that it had to be made over.
-
-The chief treasure of Amiens is part of the head of John the Baptist,
-naturally a religious relic of extraordinary interest. It is kept in
-the chapel of Saint John Baptist, and shown only at the most important
-ceremonies. All that remains is the front part of the skull, including
-the face, and this is inclosed in a hood of silver-gilt. The relic is
-said to have been kept for a long time in one of the churches in Asia,
-from which it was removed to Constantinople, and later taken from that
-city to Amiens, where it has rested ever since.
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: SALISBURY CATHEDRAL]
-
- _Salisbury Cathedral_
-
- FOUR
-
-The Cathedral of Saint Mary at Salisbury is not filled with gilding
-and warm color as the churches of southern Europe are. Its builders
-aimed rather at simplicity such as their forefathers used--plain gray
-walls, unornamented columns and arches, and few paintings. The edifice
-seems to reflect the antique dignity of those upright pillars of the
-Druids at Stonehenge, which is not far from Salisbury. Here we have the
-outcome of British race feeling in splendidly finished architecture
-placed almost side by side with that early crude expression of it.
-
-The cathedral was begun in 1220 by Richard Poore, the bishop at Old
-Sarum, who was so much annoyed by the officers of the king that he
-decided to move the church to a site on his own land which has since
-been named Salisbury. Old Sarum Cathedral, built on a bleak hill, had
-suffered for lack of water. In his choice of a foundation Bishop Poore
-went to the other extreme; for the swampy fields by the Avon, on which
-this new cathedral was erected, were so often flooded that services
-sometimes had to be suspended for days.
-
-The beautiful Lady Chapel was built in five years. The entire building,
-except the spire, which was not in the original plan, took only
-forty-six years to complete. It was consecrated in 1266. But when the
-spire was erected the architect in charge failed to strengthen the
-foundations sufficiently. The pillars and arches bulged; for they had
-never been intended to support such weight. In spite of arches walled
-up and buttresses built, the tower sagged nearly two feet toward the
-south, and has remained in that position ever since.
-
-Though simplicity and calmness are characteristic of the original
-Salisbury Cathedral, they have been emphasized to the point of bareness
-by the restoration of James Wyatt, who destroyed nearly all the stained
-glass windows, two chapels, and a belfry, and moved many of the tombs.
-There are niches in the cathedral for over a hundred statues, which for
-some reason were nearly empty at the middle of the last century. The
-statues now in place are almost all modern: sculptured, however, with a
-view to holding the original significance of the architecture. They are
-arranged to represent the Te Deum.
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: CHATEAU DE CHAMBORD]
-
- _Château de Chambord_
-
- FIVE
-
-In the park of the château, near the banks of the Loire, great ragged
-trees reach out across the sky, cutting off the faint light of the
-stars. It is midnight. Indistinctly from the direction of the château
-comes a baying of deerhounds. It passes overhead through the middle
-air, with trampling and the sound of horns, then dies away into the
-distance. The ghost of Tibault de Champagne, first hereditary Count
-Blois, a black hunter followed by black dogs, is chasing the stag. Each
-midnight, so the people of that country say, the grim old baron rides
-by with a full pack.
-
-Count Tibault had a castle there by the Loire, and for centuries his
-descendants used it as a hunting resort. In 1397 it passed into the
-hands of Louis d'Orléans. Francis I, a king of the house of Orléans,
-who knew the abandoned structure in his boyhood, developed in the
-country round this castle his well known passion for the chase, and
-that is why he chose the ruined feudal stronghold in the heart of a
-great forest for the site of his royal palace, when he might have built
-on any one of a hundred lovely spots not far away along the Loire.
-
-The king's taste did not please his courtiers, who were less found
-of hunting and solitude. They would have preferred a large city, or
-at least some fertile valley nearby. Chambord was a palace in the
-wilderness. It could not be seen from a distance, and the view from its
-windows was only a dreary wood. The building has been described as a
-dream from the Arabian Nights come true.
-
-Louis XIV made many alterations in the château. He ordered Mansart to
-construct rooms enough for the accommodation of a large court, and the
-architect, after racking his brains over the problem, cut up the roof
-for projecting windows in that style which has since become known as
-the Mansard roof. The principal door of the court is also Mansart's
-work.
-
-In 1793 the revolutionists sold everything of value that could be moved
-from the château, and Chambord was stripped of its glory in a few days.
-It has never been completely restored. Though by no means a ruin today,
-the château suffers for lack of the magnificent furnishings for which
-it was originally designed.
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: CITY HALL, NEW YORK]
-
- _City Hall, New York_
-
- SIX
-
-With the highest buildings in the world rising in rivalry nearby,
-attracting every eye because of their novelty, the New York City Hall
-often escapes notice, or is given shorter consideration than its
-excellent architecture and historical significance deserve. Though
-it is neither large nor expensive, it is better designed and more
-carefully executed than any of the older public buildings in the
-country.
-
-John McComb is generally accepted as the architect; but it would be
-safer to speak of him as the builder, since most of the designing
-seems to have been done by a French surveyor, Joseph Mangin. To Mangin
-are probably due that shapely and dignified architecture which gives
-it a place among beautiful buildings, and the skilful design of its
-decorations. McComb carried out the work of building with great care,
-receiving six dollars a day for his time. The construction was begun
-in 1803. The first intention was to use brownstone. McComb, however,
-saw that no meaner material than marble could do justice to the purpose
-or the workmanship of the proposed City Hall. Accordingly he persuaded
-the committee in charge to let him use marble on three sides. The
-stone was hauled over from the Berkshire Hilts by horses and oxen; for
-locomotives had not yet been invented.
-
-One room of the City Hall was set aside for the State governor's
-use; and it has lately been restored to the original condition. Many
-excellent portraits hang on the walls. The furniture of the Governor's
-Room was largely taken from Federal Hall, where Washington was
-inaugurated and the city government was located before the building of
-the City Hall. Federal Hall has unfortunately been destroyed. It stood
-at the corner of Wall and Nassau Streets, and was built with stone from
-the wall that gave Wall Street its name.
-
-A number of years ago there was a proposal to remove the City Hall from
-its present position because it was no longer large enough for the city
-government and was too far from the center of Greater New York. Then,
-because of its architectural merit as well as its history, such protest
-was aroused that both building and park have been kept intact.
-
-In May, 1917, a fire burned the tower and destroyed the clock of the
-City Hall.
-
-
-Transcriber's Notes:
-
- 'inclose' is an older form of 'enclose', probably still in use when
- this book was written.
-
- Italic writing is shown like this: _italic_
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mentor: Beautiful Buildings of the
-World, Serial no. 33, by Clarence Ward
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Mentor: Beautiful Buildings of the World, Serial no. 33
-
-Author: Clarence Ward
-
-Release Date: January 22, 2016 [EBook #51001]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MENTOR: BEAUTIFUL BUILDINGS OF WORLD ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Karin Spence and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
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-
-</pre>
-
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></p>
-
-<h1 class="spaced2 wsp"><span class="smcap">The Mentor</span></h1>
-
-<p class="center">"A Wise and Faithful Guide and Friend"</p>
-
-<div class="centersb p2">
-<p class="right">No. 33</p>
-<p class="left">Vol. I</p></div>
-
-<h2 class="bt">BEAUTIFUL BUILDINGS of the WORLD</h2>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="content1"> TAJ MAHAL<br />
-<br />
-THE ALHAMBRA<br />
-<br />
-AMIENS CATHEDRAL<br />
-</td>
-
-<td class="ctr">
- <img src="images/illus01.jpg" alt="" width="192" height="300" /></td>
-
-<td class="content2">
-SALISBURY CATHEDRAL<br />
-<br />
-CHÂTEAU de CHAMBORD<br />
-<br />
-NEW YORK CITY HALL<br />
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center"><i>By CLARENCE WARD</i></p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Professor of Architecture, Rutgers College</i></p>
-
-<p>Beauty in architecture is as difficult to define as beauty in nature.
-No single factor renders a building beautiful. Size and proportion,
-style and decoration, age and setting, all enter into account.
-And moreover there is the power a building possesses to appeal to the
-ideals of the beholder, to his mind as well as to his sight and touch. Even
-when judged from this broad viewpoint, the number of beautiful buildings
-in the world is legion. It would be impossible to point to anyone as the
-finest, or even to select a dozen without leaving a dozen more that were
-equally beautiful. Every age, and every nation, has left to us some crowning
-achievements of the builder's art. The following are therefore merely
-selections from this storehouse, illustrating to some degree the wealth of
-architectural treasures that is our heritage.</p>
-
-<p>Few if any buildings in the world have been the subject of such praise
-as that bestowed upon the Taj Mahal ("Gem of Buildings"). Travelers,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
-painters, authors, and poets have all sought to express in word or
-color the indefinable charm of this gem of Indian art. Built at Agra, in
-India, by the great mogul of Delhi, Shah Jahan, as a tomb for his favorite
-wife, Mumtaz Mahal, the Taj is a veritable translation into stone of
-human remembrance and affection. It was begun in 1632, and was completed
-in twenty-two years. The material of which it is built is
-pure white marble, and inlaid in its walls are jaspers, agates, and other
-stones in marvelous designs. But it is perhaps the dome that gives
-the greatest beauty to this tomb. Of typical Eastern shape, it rises a
-mass of white against the deep blue of the Indian sky, or shines like
-silver in the radiance of the Indian moon.</p>
-
-<p class="sm center bold p2">THE WORLD'S MOST BEAUTIFUL TOMB</p>
-
-<p>It cannot be denied that the Taj Mahal (tahzh mah-hahl´) owes much
-of its beauty to its setting. Not merely has it the contrast of the brilliant
-sky above, but also the deep green of the gardens at its feet, and more
-than this the four tall, graceful minarets standing like sentinels at the
-corners of the marble terrace on which the tomb is placed. The interior
-is scarcely less impressive than this outside view. Its subdued light
-serves only to show more clearly the beauty of the garlands of red and
-blue and green inlaid along its walls as never-withering memorials of the
-queen who sleeps beneath the lofty dome.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:637px;">
- <img
- class="p1"
- id="illus02"
- src="images/illus02.jpg"
- width="637"
- height="350"
- alt="" />
- <p class="p0 smcap center bold sm">THE TAJ MAHAL</p>
- <p class="center p0"><i>The approach through the splendid gardens seen in the foreground is bordered by dark cypress trees, which contrast
-admirably with the color of the marble domes beyond.</i></p>
- </div>
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></p>
-
-<p>It is perhaps beside her tomb that the traveler sees a vision of the
-proud and mighty Jahan, cruel in many ways, but steadfast in his love,
-building this glorious resting place for his fair consort, whom he called
-by the familiar name of Taj. One may see even farther still and picture
-to himself this once proud ruler, bereft of all his power and even of his
-throne, looking out from his chamber window toward this same Taj
-Mahal. Perhaps its wondrous dome gleamed in the moonlight on that
-last night before he came to rest beneath its shades as it gleams today to
-the enraptured gaze of thousands who take the pilgrimage to Agra to see
-this wonder of the Eastern world.</p>
-
-<p class="sm center bold p2">THE PALACE OF THE MOORISH KINGS</p>
-
-<p>It is not such a step as it may seem from the Taj Mahal to the
-Alhambra (al-ham'-bra). Both
-are oriental. Both are the products
-of Mohammedan art, and
-mark in a way its Eastern and
-its Western expressions. As
-early as the eighth century
-of our era the Moors of northern
-Africa crossed to Spain and
-made the Iberian peninsula a
-Moorish califate or kingdom.
-Its capital and last stronghold
-was Granada. And here on a
-lofty hill, overlooking the city,
-King or Calif Al Hamar began
-the mighty fortress of the
-Alhambra in the early years
-of the thirteenth century.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:275px;">
- <img
- class="p1"
- id="illus03"
- src="images/illus03.jpg"
- width="275"
- height="350"
- alt="" />
- <p class="p0 smcap center bold sm">COURT OF THE MYRTLES, ALHAMBRA</p>
- <p class="center p0"><i>The pool is bordered on both sides by beautiful old hedges.</i></p>
- </div>
-
-<p>As is the case with almost
-every Mohammedan building,
-its exterior is extremely plain.
-But once the door is passed one
-seems to have stepped from Europe
-to the Orient. Courtyards
-and porticos, halls and passages,
-open before the visitor in a truly
-oriental maze of color and decoration. The first important court is
-known as that of the Myrtles. In its center is a marble basin a hundred
-and thirty feet long, bordered with trees of myrtle and orange, and
-flanked at both ends by two-storied pavilions with slender marble shafts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-and graceful Moorish arches. From
-one of these pavilions opens the Hall
-of the Ambassadors, the throne room
-of the califs, and the largest chamber
-in the palace.</p>
-
-<p class="sm center bold p2">THE ALHAMBRA'S BEAUTY</p>
-
-<p>But it is not its size that makes
-this room imposing. Here, as elsewhere
-in the palace, it is the decoration.
-Rising for three or four feet
-from the floor is a band of colored
-Moorish tiles. All the wall above is
-of stucco, molded in lacelike patterns
-and painted in blues and reds and
-brilliant golden yellows. The designs
-are largely geometrical or floral, frequently
-interspersed with Arabic
-inscriptions. Some of these when
-translated read, "God is our refuge,"
-"Praise be to God," familiar phrases
-in Mohammedan faith, or "There
-is no conqueror but God." Add to
-this decoration of the walls imposing
-stalactite domes, and ceilings often
-of cedarwood inlaid with mother of
-pearl, and imagine the floors and
-windows again adorned with oriental
-rugs and hangings, and the beauty of
-the Alhambra will be easily understood.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:274px;">
- <img
- class="p1"
- id="illus04a"
- src="images/illus04a.jpg"
- width="274"
- height="350"
- alt="" />
- <p class="p0 smcap center bold sm">HALL OF REPOSE OF THE BATHS, ALHAMBRA</p>
-
- </div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:271px;">
- <img
- class="p1"
- id="illus04b"
- src="images/illus04b.jpg"
- width="271"
- height="350"
- alt="" />
- <p class="p0 smcap center bold sm">THE GATE OF JUSTICE</p>
- <p class="center p0"><i>A part of the Alhambra palace not well preserved.</i></p>
- </div>
-
-<p>But neither the Court of the
-Myrtles nor the Hall of the Ambassadors
-is the crowning glory of the
-palace. This honor belongs to the
-Court of the Lions. One hundred
-and sixteen by sixty-six feet in size,
-this court compares with any apartment
-in the world for pure, exquisite
-beauty of design. An open portico,
-its ceiling borne on a hundred and
-twenty-four slender and beautiful
-marble columns and delicately ornamented<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
-arches, incloses the central space, in the middle of which rises
-a magnificent fountain, its basin cut from a single giant block of alabaster,
-and supported on the backs of twelve lions of white marble, emblems of
-courage and strength.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:277px;">
- <img
- class="p1"
- id="illus05"
- src="images/illus05.jpg"
- width="277"
- height="350"
- alt="" />
- <p class="p0 smcap center sm bold">INTERIOR OF THE ALHAMBRA</p>
- <p class="center p0"><i>Arched window in the "Tower of the Captivity of Isabel."</i></p>
- </div>
-
-<p>It is small wonder that the last of the Moorish kings, Boabdil (bo-ahb-deel´),
-looked back with many tears at this glorious palace as he
-surrendered it in 1492 to his
-Christian conqueror Ferdinand.
-Sadly indeed he and his
-followers must have crossed
-again to the dreary deserts of
-Africa, since they left behind
-them the whole fair land of
-Spain, which they had adorned
-not merely with the Alhambra,
-but with the Alcázar at Seville,
-the mosque at Cordova,
-and other monuments of their
-civil and religious greatness.</p>
-
-<p class="sm center bold p2">THE GREAT CATHEDRALS</p>
-
-<p>At the very period when
-the Mohammedan conquerors
-of Spain were building their
-palace of the Alhambra, the
-Christians of northern France
-were erecting those vast cathedrals
-which stand today as the
-crowning achievements of the
-builder's art. Paris, Chartres
-(shahrtr), Bourges (boorzh), Rheims (reemz), Rouen (roo-ong´), Le Mans
-(lee-mong´), Beauvais (bo-vay´) and Amiens (ah-mee-ong´) are but a few
-of the long list of French Gothic cathedrals of the twelfth and thirteenth
-centuries. From such a list it is most difficult to choose. Each one has its
-distinctive claim to recognition, and its distinctive features which are not
-surpassed in any of the others. This fact, indeed, has caused it to be said
-that the ideal cathedral should have the façade of Rheims, the spires of
-Chartres, the nave of Amiens, and the choir of Beauvais. But even such
-an ideal cathedral would not be perfect without the addition of features
-from each of the other churches in our list.</p>
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></p>
-
-<p>Since, however, it is necessary to choose, let us choose Amiens; for
-perhaps this church is most widely acknowledged as the finest example
-of the Gothic style. Its façade is a masterpiece of decoration. Three
-deeply recessed portals in the lower story are covered with a wealth of
-sculptured figures in the round and in relief. Bible lessons and the
-events of human life and history, carved here in stone, taught the terrors
-of sin and hell and the joys of a godly life as preached in the church
-beyond these lofty doors. Nor is the decoration confined to sculpture;
-for the whole façade, and in fact the entire church, is a tracery of stone.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="sm center bold p2">THE GOTHIC GLORY OF AMIENS</p></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:450px;">
- <img
- class="p1"
- id="illus06a"
- src="images/illus06a.jpg"
- width="450"
- height="370"
- alt="" />
- <p class="p0 smcap center sm bold">SOUTH PORTAL OF AMIENS CATHEDRAL</p>
- <p class="center p0"><i>The statue of the Virgin which stands in the portal replaces that of
-St. Honoré, which was moved to the north transept. The carvings
-about the south portal are taken from the life of St. Honoré.</i></p>
- </div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:234px;">
- <img
- class="p2"
- id="illus06b"
- src="images/illus06b.jpg"
- width="234"
- height="350"
- alt="" />
- <p class="p0 smcap center sm bold">NAVE OF AMIENS CATHEDRAL</p>
-
- </div>
-
-<p>It is from a side view, however, that Amiens shows at its best the
-true glory of Gothic architecture. Nearly five hundred feet long and over
-two hundred feet to the ridge line of the roof, it rises high above the
-buildings of the city in which
-it stands, a symbol of the
-supremacy of spiritual over
-earthly things. To be sure
-it has its faults. The towers
-are too low and the central
-spire is of awkward shape;
-but the huge windows, with their tracery
-in geometric patterns, occupying the
-entire space between the buttresses, and
-these buttresses themselves with their
-soaring arches spanning the aisle roofs
-below, afford an unsurpassed example of
-beauty of design combined with the
-utmost structural daring. Moreover, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
-interior is even more imposing.
-Lofty piers and pointed
-arches separate the nave from
-the aisles. Slender shafts
-carry the ribs of the huge
-vaults of stone forty-three
-feet in span, which seem suspended
-in air one hundred and forty feet
-from the pavement below. In the support
-of these vaults lies the keynote of
-Gothic architecture. Though they seem
-hung as if by magic over walls of glass,
-with very little masonry for their support,
-their weight and thrust are borne
-by the sweeping arcs of the exterior flying
-buttresses and the huge piers of masonry
-from which they rise beyond the side
-aisle walls. Viewed from a central point,
-the majestic sweep of the nave, the soaring
-height of the eastern apse, the wondrous window of the northern transept,
-and the maze of piers and arches and chapels, all unite to produce
-a glorious whole which cannot be surpassed in any monument of any age.</p>
-
-<p class="sm center bold p2">SALISBURY'S SIMPLE BEAUTY</p>
-
-<p>If the interior of Amiens personifies in the highest degree the majesty
-and glory of Christian faith, the spire of Salisbury may be said to embody
-its hope and aspiration. Rising four hundred and four feet from the
-ground, this spire has few to rival it in all the world. Other cathedrals
-might dispute its claim to first place among spires; but none is
-set upon a church so fine. That Salisbury is the most beautiful
-cathedral in England is not claimed. As was the case in France, so here,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-there are too many churches, each with its own distinctive points of beauty,
-for anyone to be the finest of them all.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:450px;">
- <img
- class="p2"
- id="illus07a"
- src="images/illus07a.jpg"
- width="450"
- height="357"
- alt="" />
- <p class="p0 smcap center sm bold">SALISBURY CATHEDRAL</p>
- <p class="center p0"><i>A view from the northeast, showing plainly the double-cross
-shape of the foundation.</i></p>
- </div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:241px;">
- <img
- class="p2"
- id="illus07b"
- src="images/illus07b.jpg"
- width="241"
- height="350"
- alt="" />
- <p class="p0 smcap center sm bold">NAVE OF SALISBURY CATHEDRAL</p>
- <p class="center p0"><i>A number of interesting monuments were
-placed between the columns by James Wyatt.</i></p>
- </div>
-
-<p>But Salisbury at least must find a place among the first, and is especially
-interesting because it is exactly contemporary as to date with Amiens
-in France. Architecturally both are Gothic; yet the difference in design
-is as great as the distance in miles between them. Low instead of lofty,
-with little decoration, and set in the midst of nature's grass and trees
-instead of in a crowded city, Salisbury's appeal is through the quiet
-beauty of its line, and the simplicity of its construction in contrast to
-the complex structure of the French cathedral. The Gothic of England
-was rarely the Gothic of carefully balanced thrust and pressures, of flying
-buttresses and huge window spaces. Here at Salisbury the walls are still
-quite heavy and the windows only moderately large. They have no
-tracery of stone; but are simple, narrow openings in the walls, with
-pointed heads so like a lance in shape that they have given the name of
-Lancet to this period of English Gothic architecture. Slow to throw off
-their earlier traditions, the English builders clung, even in Gothic days,
-to many of the characteristics of the Norman era, which had produced
-such masterpieces as Durham and Peterborough, Ely and Norwich, cathedrals.
-The result of this is especially evident in the interior of Salisbury;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-for here, in spite of the shafts of Purbeck marble, one for each hour in
-the year, and in spite of the rich moldings of the piers and arches, the
-lack of structural unity, and the comparative smallness of the windows
-and lowness of the vaulting cause Salisbury's nave to fall far short of that
-of Amiens in beauty of construction. Viewed from the west, the cathedral
-is also disappointing; for the façade is an
-ugly screen wall, badly decorated, and
-deserving of little praise. But when seen
-from north or south or east, with its spire
-rising from the very heart of the church,
-Salisbury is truly inspiring. In its quiet
-close it seems the very expression of the
-church at peace.</p>
-
-<p class="sm center bold p2">CHÂTEAU de CHAMBORD</p>
-
-<p>Between the construction of Amiens
-and Salisbury and the building of the
-Château of Chambord (shong-bore´) lie
-two centuries of history. In them the
-spiritual power of the church, and the
-temporal power of the pope
-and clergy, which had been
-supreme throughout the Middle
-Ages, gave way to a large
-extent to a spirit of individualism
-and a rising power on
-the part of the king and
-nobles. This change had its
-effect upon the arts. The palace took precedence over the church in
-architecture as the secular took precedence over the religious in painting
-and the other arts. The Château of Chambord dates from the earlier
-stages of this new architectural era. Built by King Francis I in the early
-years of the sixteenth century, it is but one of the hundreds of châteaux
-erected by the kings and nobles of France, from Francis to the fall of the
-monarchy. Its architectural style is what is known as early Renaissance.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-The claim of Chambord to beauty is due, not so much to its decoration
-as to its imposing size, to the sense of spaciousness it conveys, and to
-the manner in which it reflects the spirit of its age.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:600px;">
- <img
- class="p2"
- id="illus08"
- src="images/illus08.jpg"
- width="600"
- height="350"
- alt="" />
- <p class="p0 smcap center sm bold">CHÂTEAU de CHAMBORD</p>
- <p class="center p0"><i>Showing the Mansard roof put on by the celebrated architect, Mansart, at the order of Louis XIV, to accommodate
-a large court.</i></p>
- </div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:238px;">
- <img
- class="p2"
- id="illus09a"
- src="images/illus09a.jpg"
- width="238"
- height="350"
- alt="" />
- <p class="p0 smcap center sm bold">TOWER OF THE GRAND STAIRCASE</p>
- <p class="center p0"><i>Château de Chambord.</i></p>
- </div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:545px;">
- <img
- class="p2"
- id="illus09b"
- src="images/illus09b.jpg"
- width="545"
- height="350"
- alt="" />
- <p class="p0 smcap center sm bold">HALL IN THE CHÂTEAU de CHAMBORD</p>
- <p class="center p0"><i>The two stairways seen in the back wind around the same central
-shaft and never join.</i></p>
- </div>
-
-<p>Four hundred feet square along its outer walls, this vast château
-was designed by Francis I merely as a hunting seat. The chief exterior
-attraction of the building lies in its roof. This is a very maze of
-gables, dormers, chimneys, and cupolas, dominated by the lantern that
-crowns the center stair, and in which lights were hung to guide belated
-hunters from the forest.</p>
-
-<p class="sm center bold p2">THE STAIRWAY OF CHAMBORD</p>
-
-<p>This stairway is the chief attraction of the interior. Sweeping round
-a central newel which forms an open well, it rises the full height of
-the building. Moreover, it is not a single flight of steps, but two, so
-placed that one person may go up and one come down, yet never meet.
-From this stairway four large halls open at every floor, and four hundred
-and forty rooms and fifty other stairs fill up the wings of this great
-palace. The interior, when richly furnished, must have been magnificent.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of its size, Chambord has little history of which to boast.
-Nothing of importance or even of special interest took place there.</p>
-
-<p class="sm center bold p2">NEW YORK CITY HALL</p>
-
-<p>We are fortunate indeed
-as a nation to have had in
-our earlier days an architecture
-that could boast of such
-pleasing monuments as the
-New York City Hall. Our
-ancestors in both the North
-and South were strongly influenced
-from the point of view
-of art by that English Renaissance
-which reached its culmination
-in the hands of Sir
-Christopher Wren. Many a
-New England church and
-many a Southern home boasts
-an architectural beauty of
-rare charm and in rare accord
-with the natural setting of
-this new land. Nor were we
-less fortunate in public works.
-The old and new statehouses<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-in Boston, Independence
-Hall in
-Philadelphia, and
-the Capitol in
-Washington are
-but a few of the
-early buildings in
-America that, like
-the New York City
-Hall, are worthy
-to rank among the
-best in beauty of
-design. The latter
-was the work of
-John McComb,
-Jr., and was built
-between 1803 and
-1812 in a style
-based largely upon
-the Italian Renaissance.
-Though not of very great size, its proportions are remarkably fine,
-and its architecture beautiful. For good taste and for excellence of workmanship
-it is as worthy of the city of millions today as of the city of
-thousands for which it was first built.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:305px;">
- <img
- class="p2"
- id="illus10"
- src="images/illus10.jpg"
- width="305"
- height="350"
- alt="" />
- <p class="p0 smcap center sm bold">STAIRWAY IN THE NEW YORK CITY HALL.</p>
-
- </div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:462px;">
- <img
- class="p2"
- id="illus11"
- src="images/illus11.jpg"
- width="462"
- height="350"
- alt="" />
- <p class="p0 smcap center sm bold">OLD COLONIAL CHAMBER</p>
- <p class="center p0"><i>The office of the Borough President of Manhattan in New York City Hall.</i></p>
- </div>
-
-<p>That the source of beauty in architecture is indefinable, this brief
-account of six of the world's finest buildings has clearly shown. No two
-are alike; yet all are beautiful. And this quality lies not merely in size
-and proportions, in design and decoration, but in the appeal that each one
-makes to the mind as well as to the eye. Thus the Taj Mahal fairly
-speaks of human remembrance, the Alhambra is the embodiment of
-oriental luxury, Amiens affords a majestic picture of religious power, and
-Salisbury of quiet Christian worship, Chambord conjures up visions of
-gay kings and courtiers, while New York in its City Hall possesses a
-worthy monument of civic interest and pride. Many another building
-could be added to such a list as ours, and in the case of each it would be
-found that added to its visible and tangible beauty was an invisible character
-that marked it above its fellows. It is from this broad standpoint
-that all architecture should be judged.</p>
-
-<div class="centerdb">
-
-<p class="sm">SUPPLEMENTARY READING:&mdash;"History of Architecture," Hamlin; "Indian and
-Eastern Architecture," Fergusson; "Medieval Architecture," Porter; "Handbook of
-English Cathedrals," Van Rensselaer; "Renaissance Architecture in France," Blomfield.</p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></p>
-
-<h2 class="space-above"><big>THE MENTOR</big><br /><br class="b30" />
-
-<span class="sm">ISSUED SEMI-MONTHLY BY</span><br /><br class="b50" />
-
-<span class="lg">The Mentor Association, Inc.</span><br /><br class="b30" />
-
-<span class="sm">381 Fourth Ave., New York, N. Y.</span></h2></div>
-
-<div class="centerdb">
-<p class="right">No. 33</p>
-<p class="left">Volume I</p></div>
-
-<div class="centerb">
-<p class="sm">ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION, FOUR DOLLARS. SINGLE
-COPIES TWENTY CENTS. FOREIGN POSTAGE, SEVENTY-FIVE
-CENTS EXTRA. CANADIAN POSTAGE, FIFTY
-CENTS EXTRA. ENTERED AT THE POST OFFICE AT
-NEW YORK, N. Y., AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER. COPYRIGHT,
-1913, BY THE MENTOR ASSOCIATION, INC.
-PRESIDENT, THOMAS H. BECK; VICE-PRESIDENT,
-WALTER P. TEN EYCK; SECRETARY, W. D. MOFFAT;
-TREASURER, J. S. CAMPBELL; ASST. TREASURER AND
-ASST. SECRETARY, H. A. CROWE.</p></div>
-
-<p class="center bold "><i>Editorial</i></p>
-
-<p>A man much occupied in his business
-was asked how he came to know so much
-on so many different subjects. His answer
-was: "Not by study&mdash;I have had no
-time for that&mdash;I have got my knowledge
-from the men who could give it to me, and
-from the reading that they have suggested
-to me. When several of my friends
-who know a subject have told me about
-it, I have got it in a way that I could not
-get in study. I have got it from different
-points of view."</p>
-
-<p class="center">&#42;&nbsp;&nbsp;&#42;&nbsp;&nbsp;&#42;</p>
-
-<p>These words were said in the course of
-a conversation about The Mentor. Someone
-had referred to the variety of subjects
-offered in the schedule of The Mentor
-Association, and had asked whether certain
-regular courses of reading could not
-be included with advantage. With the
-thought of that business man and others
-like him, we are aiming for something
-larger and more beneficial than a fixed
-set of reading courses. We have planned
-to give in The Mentor the broad, liberal
-knowledge that comes not from a strict
-course of study closely adhered to, but
-from contact with writers of authority in
-varied fields. The readers of The Mentor
-get the rich benefits afforded by many
-minds, and the year's reading is wide in
-its reach and well balanced.</p>
-
-<p>So much for the general plan of The
-Mentor Association. But there is something
-to be said for the reader who wants
-to have a logical course of reading through
-the seasons. So while we offer variety
-from week to week, we plan to cover
-the larger subjects in groups of articles
-that are definitely related to each other.</p>
-
-<p class="center">&#42;&nbsp;&nbsp;&#42;&nbsp;&nbsp;&#42;</p>
-
-<p>If one wants to follow out a certain subject,
-whether it be travel, history, or art,
-he can take up the reading of his Mentors
-in groups. Look at the schedule of 1913.
-In the varied program of the year's reading
-you will detect numbers that naturally
-belong together. You can select a set of
-Mentors that will take you on a trip to
-interesting places, with Mr. Dwight L.
-Elmendorf as a companion. If literature is
-a subject of interest to you, you can select
-Mentors on literary matters prepared under
-the advice of, and some of them
-written by, Mr. Hamilton W. Mabie.
-Suppose that history is what you are after;
-Professor Albert Bushnell Hart gives you
-the "Story of America" in several numbers.
-It is hardly necessary to point out
-what Professor John C. Van Dyke has
-done for fine art in the numbers of The
-Mentor prepared under his direction. And
-so groups of Mentors on other subjects
-may be brought together out of the
-schedule.</p>
-
-<p class="center">&#42;&nbsp;&nbsp;&#42;&nbsp;&nbsp;&#42;</p>
-
-<p>In preparing the schedule for 1914 we
-have taken thought not only for the wide
-scope of the whole year's plan, but for the
-treatment of special subjects in a way that
-will form natural groups. We have found
-this condition has met with favor, and it
-seems worth while to assure ourselves that
-all the readers of The Mentor appreciate
-it. We are told that some are gathering
-the numbers relating to a single subject
-together so as to have a small library on
-each subject available for reference. Not
-a bad idea. Imagine what an attractive
-set of volumes could be made out of
-twenty or thirty Mentors on travel by Mr.
-Elmendorf! Think what a beautiful and
-valuable set of books could be had by
-binding up the art numbers! Keep your
-back numbers. They are just as valuable
-as the ones to come.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter space-below3">
-
-<p class="pagenum"> <a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></p>
-
-<div class="center1db">
-<h2 class="m1"><i>BEAUTIFUL BUILDINGS OF THE WORLD</i><span class="pad5"><i>Taj Mahal</i></span></h2>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="center sm p2 bold">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp;ONE&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:461px;">
- <a href="images/plate1-large.jpg">
- <img
- class="p0"
- id="plate1"
- src="images/plate1.jpg"
- width="461"
- height="650"
- alt="" /></a>
- <p class="p1 smcap center sans sm">THE TAJ MAHAL</p>
- </div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/a-block.jpg" width="51" height="50" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">AT the top of a precipice overhanging the River Jumna
-in India stands the most poetic mausoleum in the
-world. The Taj Mahal, "a dream in marble, designed
-by Titans and finished by jewelers," is the
-tomb built by Shah Jahan, the Mogul emperor, for his wife
-Mumtaz Mahal, whom he called Taj-Bibi. She was the loveliest
-beauty of the Indies, and Shah Jahan
-loved her so passionately that he thought
-of no other woman while she lived and was
-lost in grief after her death. He vowed
-that her tomb should be the most beautiful
-building in the world.</p>
-
-<p>The Taj is of snow-white marble outside
-and jeweled mosaic within. It was
-planned by a Persian, Ustad Isa, who
-designed in the Persian rather than the
-Indian style of architecture. Twenty
-thousand men worked twenty-two years
-to finish it. In the center of a great square,
-paved with white marble and having a
-slender tower of the same stone at each
-corner, rises the memorial of Taj-Bibi&mdash;not
-merely a masterpiece of architecture,
-but also a perfect interpretation of womanly
-nature. The spirit of Mumtaz
-Mahal seems to have been carved into the
-marble.</p>
-
-<p>The mosaic work of the interior is the
-finest to be found in any eastern country.
-Precious stones are used unsparingly&mdash;jasper
-and agate, carnelian and chalcedony.
-Marble lacework of wonderful lightness
-screens the windows and doorways. In
-the center are the tombs of Mumtaz Mahal
-and Shah Jahan; but their bodies, according
-to the Indian custom, lie in a
-vault beneath the building. Shah Jahan
-had begun a tomb for himself on the opposite
-side of the river, which he never
-finished because Aurantzeb, his son, rebelled
-against him and took away the
-empire. He was therefore buried by the
-side of his beloved wife.</p>
-
-<p>Shah Jahan was a cold and haughty
-man; but he ruled India well, and his
-pride was softened in later life by the
-death of his wife. It is said that during
-his reign he brought India peace and prosperity
-by putting all his rivals to death.
-Besides the Taj Mahal, two other famous
-buildings, the Pearl Mosque at Agra and
-the great mosque of Delhi, which were
-built by Shah Jahan, have made his reign
-one of the most memorable in Indian history.
-The emperor's treasury must have
-been practically unlimited; for the peacock
-throne, made during his reign, was
-estimated by Tavernier to be worth sixty
-million dollars. The festival at his coronation
-alone cost eight millions.</p>
-
-<p>There is a legend that when he had finished
-the Taj Mahal, Shah Jahan ordered
-the architect to be thrown over the cliff
-into the River Jumna, for fear he might
-plan another building as beautiful as
-the Taj.</p>
-
-<p class="center sm">PREPARED BY THE EDITORIAL STAFF OF THE MENTOR ASSOCIATION<br />
-ILLUSTRATION FOR THE MENTOR. VOL. I, No. 33. SERIAL No. 33<br />
-COPYRIGHT. 1913. BY THE MENTOR ASSOCIATION. INC.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter space-below3">
-
-<p class="pagenum"> <a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></p>
-
-<div class="center1db">
-<h2 class="m1"><i>BEAUTIFUL BUILDINGS OF THE WORLD</i><span class="pad5"><i>The Alhambra</i></span></h2>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="center sm p2 bold">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp;TWO&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:600px;">
- <a href="images/plate2-large.jpg">
- <img
- class="p2"
- id="plate2"
- src="images/plate2.jpg"
- width="600"
- height="432"
- alt="" /></a>
- <p class="p1 smcap center sm sans">THE ALHAMBRA&mdash;COURT OF THE LIONS</p>
- </div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/t-block.jpg" width="51" height="50" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE people about Granada have always held that the
-Palace of the Alhambra was built under a magic
-spell. To their minds human workmanship and the
-power of wealth are too feeble for the erection of a
-structure so enduring and magnificent. Indeed, great architects
-can hardly conceive the skill that balanced those halls
-and gardens and towers one against the
-other with perfect symmetry, or the patience
-that worked out each interlaced design
-without error in either the art or the
-chiseling.</p>
-
-<p>Pains and expense were not spared in
-the construction, and it is no wonder that
-the Spaniards should have thought the
-work supernatural. Slim pillars of the
-rarest white marble give grace to every
-court of the palace. The carvings and
-designs are everywhere gilded, and where
-these are painted between the gilding, blue,
-red, and yellow, the purest colors only are
-used. The blue is ultramarine, made
-from a precious stone, the lapis lazuli of
-the Egyptians, which never fades.</p>
-
-<p>Besides warmth of color and grace of
-form, the Moorish architects worked for
-durability. The aqueducts they built
-still bring an abundant supply of water
-from the mountains to fill those baths,
-fountains and marble-bordered ponds
-for which the courts and gardens of the
-Alhambra are famous. In spite of earth-quakes
-the columns and arches have nearly
-all held their place and their perfect form.
-The palace that Charles V built there in
-a vain effort to rival the Moorish masterpiece,
-and for which he made room by
-removing part of the Alhambra palace,
-stands today an uncompleted and roofless
-ruin; while the much older Alhambra is
-still clothed in a glory of bright, fresh color.</p>
-
-<p>The Alhambra is not one building, but
-a collection of buildings on a high plateau.
-Long before the erection of the great palace
-the hilltop was surrounded by a wall
-with many towers for defense, and the Alcazaba,
-the first palace built on the Alhambra
-hill, was used as a residence by the
-early kings of Granada. Older than all,
-the "Vermilion Towers" stand on a neighboring
-hill, some distance outside the now
-ruined Alhambra wall.</p>
-
-<p>The Palace of the Alhambra is said to
-have been started by Mohammed: but the
-foundations were probably laid by Calif
-Al Hamar, who is also distinguished for
-having begun to pay a yearly tribute to
-the kings of Castile. The construction
-went on during several reigns, and was
-completed by Yusuf with the building of
-the Gate of Justice in 1348. All the later
-kings of Granada lived in it until 1492,
-when the Moorish power fell before Ferdinand
-and Isabella, and Boabdil was banished
-forever from the home of his fathers.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter space-below3">
-
-<p class="pagenum"> <a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></p>
-
-<div class="center1db">
-<h2 class="m1"><i>BEAUTIFUL BUILDINGS OF THE WORLD</i><span class="pad5"><i>Amiens Cathedral</i></span></h2>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="center sm p2 bold">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp;THREE&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:427px;">
- <a href="images/plate3-large.jpg">
- <img
- class="p2"
- id="plate3"
- src="images/plate3.jpg"
- width="427"
- height="600"
- alt="" /></a>
- <p class="p1 smcap center sm sans">AMIENS CATHEDRAL</p>
- </div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/i-block.jpg" width="51" height="50" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IT was at Amiens that the renowned Saint Martin
-gave half of his cloak to a beggar who stood shivering
-by the roadside. Other saints in that city,
-though we know less of their life histories, must
-have exercised even more generosity during the Middle Ages
-to build and rebuild the old cathedral in the face of repeated
-misfortune. The patience and zeal with
-which those men of Amiens raised up their
-cathedral four times from its ashes, remain
-forever in the fame of this most perfect
-of French Gothic churches.</p>
-
-<p>When the Norsemen plundered the
-coast of France in 881 they sent a great
-fleet up the River Somme. Amiens, taken
-by surprise, fell before the attack of those
-reckless and powerful old Vikings, and the
-cathedral, then a flimsy wooden structure,
-was burned to the ground. A new building
-which the people of Amiens put up in
-the same place when they had sufficiently
-recovered from the losses of the invasion,
-was destroyed by lightning in 1019. The
-next structure was burned in 1107, and
-the one that replaced it was struck by
-lightning in 1218 and completely ruined.
-Then in 1220 the present cathedral was
-begun. Even that has not escaped entirely
-from the lightning and conflagration
-that had wrecked so many structures
-on the same spot. In 1258, before the work
-was completed, the woodwork caught fire,
-and was so badly charred that part of it
-had to be taken down and rebuilt. Traces
-of fire may still be seen on some of the
-arches. Later the slim central spire, which
-is one of the striking features of Amiens
-Cathedral, was so badly damaged by lightning
-that it had to be made over.</p>
-
-<p>The chief treasure of Amiens is part of
-the head of John the Baptist, naturally a
-religious relic of extraordinary interest.
-It is kept in the chapel of Saint John Baptist,
-and shown only at the most important
-ceremonies. All that remains is the front
-part of the skull, including the face, and
-this is inclosed in a hood of silver-gilt.
-The relic is said to have been kept for a
-long time in one of the churches in Asia,
-from which it was removed to Constantinople,
-and later taken from that city to
-Amiens, where it has rested ever since.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter space-below3">
-
-<p class="pagenum"> <a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></p>
-
-<div class="center1db">
-<h2 class="m1"><i>BEAUTIFUL BUILDINGS OF THE WORLD</i><span class="pad5"><i>Salisbury Cathedral</i></span></h2>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="center sm p2 bold">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp;FOUR&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:600px;">
- <a href="images/plate4-large.jpg">
- <img
- class="p2"
- id="plate4"
- src="images/plate4.jpg"
- width="600"
- height="410"
- alt="" /></a>
- <p class="p1 smcap center sm sans">SALISBURY CATHEDRAL</p>
- </div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/t-block.jpg" width="51" height="50" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE Cathedral of Saint Mary at Salisbury is not
-filled with gilding and warm color as the churches
-of southern Europe are. Its builders aimed rather at
-simplicity such as their forefathers used&mdash;plain gray
-walls, unornamented columns and arches, and few paintings.
-The edifice seems to reflect the antique dignity of those upright
-pillars of the Druids at Stonehenge, which
-is not far from Salisbury. Here we have
-the outcome of British race feeling in
-splendidly finished architecture placed almost
-side by side with that early crude
-expression of it.</p>
-
-<p>The cathedral was begun in 1220 by
-Richard Poore, the bishop at Old Sarum,
-who was so much annoyed by the officers
-of the king that he decided to move the
-church to a site on his own land which has
-since been named Salisbury. Old Sarum
-Cathedral, built on a bleak hill, had suffered
-for lack of water. In his choice of a
-foundation Bishop Poore went to the other
-extreme; for the swampy fields by the
-Avon, on which this new cathedral was
-erected, were so often flooded that services
-sometimes had to be suspended for days.</p>
-
-<p>The beautiful Lady Chapel was built in
-five years. The entire building, except
-the spire, which was not in the original
-plan, took only forty-six years to complete.
-It was consecrated in 1266. But
-when the spire was erected the architect
-in charge failed to strengthen the foundations
-sufficiently. The pillars and arches
-bulged; for they had never been intended
-to support such weight. In spite of arches
-walled up and buttresses built, the tower
-sagged nearly two feet toward the south,
-and has remained in that position ever
-since.</p>
-
-<p>Though simplicity and calmness are
-characteristic of the original Salisbury
-Cathedral, they have been emphasized to
-the point of bareness by the restoration of
-James Wyatt, who destroyed nearly all the
-stained glass windows, two chapels, and a
-belfry, and moved many of the tombs.
-There are niches in the cathedral for over
-a hundred statues, which for some reason
-were nearly empty at the middle of the
-last century. The statues now in place
-are almost all modern: sculptured, however,
-with a view to holding the original
-significance of the architecture. They are
-arranged to represent the Te Deum.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter space-below3">
-
-<p class="pagenum"> <a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></p>
-
-<div class="center1db">
-<h2 class="m1"><i>BEAUTIFUL BUILDINGS OF THE WORLD</i><span class="pad5"><i>Château de Chambord</i></span></h2>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="center sm p2 bold">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp;FIVE&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:600px;">
- <a href="images/plate5-large.jpg">
- <img
- class="p2"
- id="plate5"
- src="images/plate5.jpg"
- width="600"
- height="412"
- alt="" /></a>
- <p class="p1 smcap center sm sans">CHATEAU DE CHAMBORD</p>
- </div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/i-block.jpg" width="51" height="50" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IN the park of the château, near the banks of the
-Loire, great ragged trees reach out across the sky,
-cutting off the faint light of the stars. It is midnight.
-Indistinctly from the direction of the château
-comes a baying of deerhounds. It passes overhead through
-the middle air, with trampling and the sound of horns, then
-dies away into the distance. The ghost of
-Tibault de Champagne, first hereditary
-Count Blois, a black hunter followed by
-black dogs, is chasing the stag. Each
-midnight, so the people of that country
-say, the grim old baron rides by with a
-full pack.</p>
-
-<p>Count Tibault had a castle there by the
-Loire, and for centuries his descendants
-used it as a hunting resort. In 1397 it
-passed into the hands of Louis d'Orléans.
-Francis I, a king of the house of Orléans,
-who knew the abandoned structure in his
-boyhood, developed in the country round
-this castle his well known passion for the
-chase, and that is why he chose the ruined
-feudal stronghold in the heart of a great
-forest for the site of his royal palace, when
-he might have built on any one of a hundred
-lovely spots not far away along the
-Loire.</p>
-
-<p>The king's taste did not please his courtiers,
-who were less found of hunting and
-solitude. They would have preferred a
-large city, or at least some fertile valley
-nearby. Chambord was a palace in the
-wilderness. It could not be seen from a
-distance, and the view from its windows
-was only a dreary wood. The building
-has been described as a dream from the
-Arabian Nights come true.</p>
-
-<p>Louis XIV made many alterations in
-the château. He ordered Mansart to construct
-rooms enough for the accommodation
-of a large court, and the architect,
-after racking his brains over the problem,
-cut up the roof for projecting windows in
-that style which has since become known
-as the Mansard roof. The principal door
-of the court is also Mansart's work.</p>
-
-<p>In 1793 the revolutionists sold everything
-of value that could be moved from
-the château, and Chambord was stripped
-of its glory in a few days. It has never
-been completely restored. Though by no
-means a ruin today, the château suffers
-for lack of the magnificent furnishings for
-which it was originally designed.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter space-below3">
-
-<p class="pagenum"> <a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></p>
-
-<div class="center1db">
-<h2 class="m1"><i>BEAUTIFUL BUILDINGS OF THE WORLD</i><span class="pad5"><i>City Hall, New York</i></span></h2>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="center sm p2 bold">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp;SIX&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:600px;">
- <a href="images/plate6-large.jpg">
- <img
- class="p2"
- id="plate6"
- src="images/plate6.jpg"
- width="600"
- height="405"
- alt="" /></a>
- <p class="p1 smcap center sm sans">CITY HALL NEW YORK</p>
- </div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/w-block.jpg" width="51" height="50" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WITH the highest buildings in the world rising in
-rivalry nearby, attracting every eye because of
-their novelty, the New York City Hall often escapes
-notice, or is given shorter consideration than
-its excellent architecture and historical significance deserve.
-Though it is neither large nor expensive, it is better designed
-and more carefully executed than any of
-the older public buildings in the country.</p>
-
-<p>John McComb is generally accepted as
-the architect; but it would be safer to
-speak of him as the builder, since most of
-the designing seems to have been done by
-a French surveyor, Joseph Mangin. To
-Mangin are probably due that shapely and
-dignified architecture which gives it a
-place among beautiful buildings, and the
-skilful design of its decorations. McComb
-carried out the work of building with great
-care, receiving six dollars a day for his
-time. The construction was begun in
-1803. The first intention was to use
-brownstone. McComb, however, saw that
-no meaner material than marble could do
-justice to the purpose or the workmanship
-of the proposed City Hall. Accordingly
-he persuaded the committee in charge to
-let him use marble on three sides. The
-stone was hauled over from the Berkshire
-Hilts by horses and oxen; for locomotives
-had not yet been invented.</p>
-
-<p>One room of the City Hall was set
-aside for the State governor's use; and it
-has lately been restored to the original
-condition. Many excellent portraits hang
-on the walls. The furniture of the Governor's
-Room was largely taken from
-Federal Hall, where Washington was inaugurated
-and the city government was
-located before the building of the City
-Hall. Federal Hall has unfortunately
-been destroyed. It stood at the corner of
-Wall and Nassau Streets, and was built
-with stone from the wall that gave Wall
-Street its name.</p>
-
-<p>A number of years ago there was a proposal
-to remove the City Hall from its
-present position because it was no longer
-large enough for the city government and
-was too far from the center of Greater
-New York. Then, because of its architectural
-merit as well as its history, such
-protest was aroused that both building
-and park have been kept intact.</p>
-
-<p>In May, 1917, a fire burned the tower
-and destroyed the clock of the City Hall.</p>
-
-<div class="center1db">
-<p class="transnote p6">Transcriber's Notes:<br />
-
-1. 'inclose' is an older form of 'enclose', probably still in use when this book was written. </p></div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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