The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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If you want to teach someone a subject you do not know yourself, let  
him measure the length of an object unknown to you, and he will  
learn the measure you did not know before;--Master Giovanni da Lodi.  
XXI.  
Letters. Personal Records. Dated Notes.  
When we consider how superficial and imperfect are the accounts of  
Leonardo's life written some time after his death by Vasari and  
others, any notes or letters which can throw more light on his  
personal circumstances cannot fail to be in the highest degree  
interesting. The texts here given as Nos. 1351--1353, set his  
residence in Rome in quite a new aspect; nay, the picture which  
irresistibly dwells in our minds after reading these details of his  
life in the Vatican, forms a striking contrast to the contemporary  
life of Raphael at Rome.  
I have placed foremost of these documents the very remarkable  
letters to the Defterdar of Syria. In these Leonardo speaks of  
himself as having staid among the mountains of Armenia, and as the  
biographies of the master tell nothing of any such distant journeys,  
it would seem most obvious to treat this passage as fiction, and so  
spare ourselves the onus of proof and discussion. But on close  
examination no one can doubt that these documents, with the  
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