“ No work of man has life like the fleche. One sees it for a greater distance and feels it for a longer time than is possible with any other human structure, unless it be the dome. ”
Henry Adams, Mont-Saint-Michel and Chartres (1904). copy citation
Author | Henry Adams |
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Source | Mont-Saint-Michel and Chartres |
Topic | distance work |
Date | 1904 |
Language | English |
Reference | |
Note | |
Weblink | http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/4584/pg4584-images.html |
Context
“We have got a happy summer before us, merely in looking for these church-towers. There is no livelier amusement for fine weather than in hunting them as though they were mushrooms, and no study in architecture nearly so delightful. No work of man has life like the fleche. One sees it for a greater distance and feels it for a longer time than is possible with any other human structure, unless it be the dome. There is more play of light on the octagonal faces of the fleche as the sun moves around them than can be got out of the square or the cone or any other combination of surfaces. For some reason, the facets of the hexagon or octagon are more pleasing than the rounded surfaces of the cone, and Normandy is said to be peculiarly the home of this particularly Gothic church ornament;”
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