CHAPTER VII. THE VILLA QUARTERS
Mr. Ruskin’s denunciation of
the New Town of Edinburgh includes, as I have heard
it repeated, nearly all the stone and lime we have
to show. Many however find a grand air and something
settled and imposing in the better parts; and upon
many, as I have said, the confusion of styles induces
an agreeable stimulation of the mind. But upon
the subject of our recent villa architecture, I am
frankly ready to mingle my tears with Mr. Ruskin’s,
and it is a subject which makes one envious of his
large declamatory and controversial eloquence.
Day by day, one new villa, one new
object of offence, is added to another; all around
Newington and Morningside, the dismallest structures
keep springing up like mushrooms; the pleasant hills
are loaded with them, each impudently squatted in
its garden, each roofed and carrying chimneys like
a house. And yet a glance of an eye discovers
their true character. They are not houses; for
they were not designed with a view to human habitation,
and the internal arrangements are, as they tell me,
fantastically unsuited to the needs of man. They
are not buildings; for you can scarcely say a thing
is built where every measurement is in clamant disproportion
with its neighbour. They belong to no style of
art, only to a form of business much to be regretted.
Why should it be cheaper to erect
a structure where the size of the windows bears no
rational relation to the size of the front? Is
there any profit in a misplaced chimney-stalk?
Does a hard-working, greedy builder gain more on
a monstrosity than on a decent cottage of equal plainness?
Frankly, we should say, No. Bricks may be omitted,
and green timber employed, in the construction of
even a very elegant design; and there is no reason
why a chimney should be made to vent, because it is
so situated as to look comely from without.
On the other hand, there is a noble way of being ugly:
a high-aspiring fiasco like the fall of Lucifer.
There are daring and gaudy buildings that manage to
be offensive, without being contemptible; and we know
that ’fools rush in where angels fear to tread.’
But to aim at making a common-place villa, and to
make it insufferably ugly in each particular; to attempt
the homeliest achievement, and to attain the bottom
of derided failure; not to have any theory but profit
and yet, at an equal expense, to outstrip all competitors
in the art of conceiving and rendering permanent deformity;
and to do all this in what is, by nature, one of the
most agreeable neighbourhoods in Britain: what
are we to say, but that this also is a distinction,
hard to earn although not greatly worshipful?
Indifferent buildings give pain to
the sensitive; but these things offend the plainest
taste. It is a danger which threatens the amenity
of the town; and as this eruption keeps spreading
on our borders, we have ever the farther to walk among
unpleasant sights, before we gain the country air.
If the population of Edinburgh were a living, autonomous
body, it would arise like one man and make night hideous
with arson; the builders and their accomplices would
be driven to work, like the Jews of yore, with the
trowel in one hand and the defensive cutlass in the
other; and as soon as one of these masonic wonders
had been consummated, right-minded iconoclasts should
fall thereon and make an end of it at once.
Possibly these words may meet the
eye of a builder or two. It is no use asking
them to employ an architect; for that would be to touch
them in a delicate quarter, and its use would largely
depend on what architect they were minded to call
in. But let them get any architect in the world
to point out any reasonably well-proportioned villa,
not his own design; and let them reproduce that model
to satiety.