Page:A History of Art in Ancient Egypt Vol 2.djvu/155

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The Oruonnance of Egvi'tiax Colonnades, 133 insoluble, especially when we have to do with a race who created all their artistic forms and idioms for themselves. The case is different when we have to do with a nation who came under the influence of an earlier civilization than their own. Then, and then only, can such an inquiry lead to useful results. The word orio-in is then a synonym for affiliation, and an inquiry is directed towards establishing the method and the period in which the act of birth took place. In our later volumes we shall have to go into such questions in detail, but in the case of Egypt we are spared that task. All that we mean by civilization had its origin in Egypt, so far, at least, as we can tell. It is the highest point in the stream to which we can mount. Any attempt to determine the genesis of each particular aesthetic motive in a past so distant that a glance into its depths takes away our breath, would be a mere waste of time and ingenuity. ^ 6. The Ordonnance of Egyptian Colonnades. A French writer tells us that uniformity is sure to give birth to weariness sooner or later, and there are many people who would believe, If they thought about It, that his words exactlv apply to the art of Egypt. The character which was given to it when its creations first became known to modern Europe clings to it still. Our museums are full of objects dating from the last centuries of the monarchy and even from the Greek and Roman period. A very slight study of Egyptian architecture is sufficient, however, to destroy such a prejudice, In spite of its convenience for those who are lazily disposed. The pier and column w^ere extremely various In their types, as we have seen, and each type was divided Into numerous species. The same variety is found In the arrangement, or ordonnance, of the columns, both In the interior and exterior of their buildings. We cannot prove this better than by placing a series of plans of hypostyle halls and porticos before the eye of the reader, accompanied by a few illustrations in perspective which will suffice to show the freedom enjo)ed by the Egyptian architect and the number of different arrangements which he could introduce into a single bulldino-.