The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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This animal has a horror of the poor, because they eat poor food,  
and it loves the rich, because they have good living and especially  
meat. And the excrement of animals always retains some virtue of its  
origin as is shown by the faeces ...  
Now dogs have so keen a smell, that they can discern by their nose  
the virtue remaining in these faeces, and if they find them in the  
streets, smell them and if they smell in them the virtue of meat or  
of other things, they take them, and if not, they leave them: And to  
return to the question, I say that if by means of this smell they  
know that dog to be well fed, they respect him, because they judge  
that he has a powerful and rich master; and if they discover no such  
smell with the virtue of meet, they judge that dog to be of small  
account and to have a poor and humble master, and therefore they  
bite that dog as they would his master.  
1
331.  
The circular plans of carrying earth are very useful, inasmuch as  
men never stop in their work; and it is done in many ways. By one of  
these ways men carry the earth on their shoulders, by another in  
chests and others on wheelbarrows. The man who carries it on his  
shoulders first fills the tub on the ground, and he loses time in  
hoisting it on to his shoulders. He with the chests loses no time.  
[Footnote: The subject of this text has apparently no connection  
with the other texts of this section.]  
1053  


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