Page:Guide to the Bohemian section and to the Kingdom of Bohemia - 1906.djvu/18

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

16

tury by the most renowned Gothic architect Viollet-le-Duc, who speaks of its beauties as follows: „On aperçoit à travers des toits aigus de la ville basse les longues lignes horizontales de la vieille cité convertes de monastères et de palais entremelés de jardins magnifiques. Ce n’est pas par la pureté des details que brillent les monuments de Prague, mais par l’ampleur et un certain air aristocratique qui n’éclate pas le pittoresque.

Then he appreciates in warm words its unusual historic and architectural importance by which it surpassed even the much vaunted Nuremberg. He says: „Prague est bien une ville du moyen âge, belle, bien percée couverte d’edifices énormes à cheval sur une grande rivière et couronnée par une acropole, qui conserve l’aspect d’une vaste citadelle gothique avec son enceinte des murs suivant les sinuosités de la colline qui lui sert d’assiette. Nuremberg malgré ses richesses architectoniques fatigue par la multiplicité des details; les edifices les uns sur les autres, petits dormant sur les rues ou des places peu étroites, ne permettent au regard de se réposer nulle part. Il semble que l’on a voulu dans cette ville reunir sur un seul point ce que l’art du moyen âge a pu enfanter; c’est un magasin de bric à brac plutôt qu’une cité.

Greater still is the enthusiasm, with which the well known French aesthetic and critic William Ritter speaks about Prague in a letter which he sent to the magazine Lumír in 1899. He mentions Viollet-le-Duc’s love for Prague and speaks for himself: „When Viollet-le-Duc knew Prague it was such an admirable town, that every stone of it would have deserved a separate description. If Ruskin had not been so much occupied with Florence, Venice and Amiens, he might have written three volumes with the title „The Stones of Prague“ and there would not have been on the surface of the earth a more beautiful book of history and architecture. There may be books beautiful perhaps in other respects but none would be more beautiful in this particular.“

In the same way the Danish writer George Brandes was struck with the beauty of Prague; and the famous sculptor Rodin calls Prague very properly „the Rome of the North“.