Pugin's writings and buildings changed the course of British
architecture. The Present State, published in 1843, is significant in
marking the transition from Pugin the Gothic propagandist and polemicist
to Pugin the working architect and designer who can now show actual
examples of his own buildings. In this book he espouses Gothic of the
early fourteenth century as the pinnacle of architectural excellence, a
style which would remain the backbone of the Victorian Gothic Revival
for the next thirty years. Having lamented the existing state of church
architecture, Pugin proceeds to describe in some detail, and with
reference to his own buildings, the essentials of a properly designed
and appointed Catholic parish. This pioneering work is reproduced here
in facsimile and carries an insightful introduction by leading Pugin
scholar, Michael Fisher.