Armour & Weapons
Forfatter: Charles Ffoulkes
År: 1909
Forlag: At The Clarendon Press
Sted: Oxford
Sider: 112
UDK: 623 Ffou
With A Preface By Viscount Dillon, V.P.S.A. Curator Of The Tower Armouries
Søgning i bogen
Den bedste måde at søge i bogen er ved at downloade PDF'en og søge i den.
Derved får du fremhævet ordene visuelt direkte på billedet af siden.
Digitaliseret bog
Bogens tekst er maskinlæst, så der kan være en del fejl og mangler.
96
THE DECADENCE
CHAP. VI
to his position his hair is held by two figures whose attributes
seem to suggest that intercrossing of birds, beasts, and fishes which
delighted the decadent mind of the period. The figures are human
to the waist and end in a dolphin’s tail. Angels’ wings spring
from their shoulders and leopards’ claws from the junction of tail
and waist. Not content with this outrage to the dignity of art,
the craftsman ends his warrior in an architectural base which has
not even the slight merit of probability which the tail of the merman
might offer. In short it is an example of technical skill at its
highest, and artistic perception at its lowest point. The shield
from the Vienna collection (Fig. 44) is another example, like King
Sebastian’s suit, of meaningless decoration. The strap work does
not in any way follow the lines of the shield, and the female figures
seem to be introduced only to show that the craftsman could
portray the human form in steel as easily as he could the more
conventional ornament.
As the armourer, weary of constructional skill, turned to
ornament as a means of showing to what further extent his powers
could expand, so, with this change in his point of view, his con-
structional skill itself declined. The headpiece, which in the
golden age of the armourer was forged in as few pieces as possible,
is in the late seventeenth century made of many pieces, as the
art of skilful forging declines. The ingenious articulations of the
soleret are changed, and the foot is cased in plates which, over-
lapping only in one direction, preclude the easy movement of the
wearer. The fine lines of leg and arm defences, which in the
fifteenth and sixteenth century follow the shape of the limbs, give
place to straight tubular plates which can only be likened to the
modern stove-pipe. The grace and symmetry of the Gothic suit
shown on Plate VIII, especially the leg armour, exemplify this
merit of the best period of armour, while the suit made for
Louis XIV, and the gilt suit of Charles I in the Tower, offend in
the opposite direction. Another sure indication of the decadence
of the craftsman is to be found in the imitation of constructional
detail with no practical purpose. Examples of this may be seen