The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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lapse of time; particularly because, in order to explain the cause  
of so great an effect, it is necessary to describe with accuracy the  
nature of the place; and by this means I can afterwards easily  
satisfy your above-mentioned request. [Footnote 62: This passage was  
evidently intended as an improvement on that immediately preceding  
it. The purport of both is essentially the same, but the first is  
pitched in a key of ill-disguised annoyance which is absent from the  
second. I do not see how these two versions can be reconciled with  
the romance-theory held by Prof. Govi.]  
I will pass over any description of the form of Asia Minor, or as to  
what seas or lands form the limits of its outline and extent,  
because I know that by your own diligence and carefulness in your  
studies you have not remained in ignorance of these matters [65];  
and I will go on to describe the true form of the Taurus Mountain  
which is the cause of this stupendous and harmful marvel, and which  
will serve to advance us in our purpose [66]. This Taurus is that  
mountain which, with many others is said to be the ridge of Mount  
Caucasus; but wishing to be very clear about it, I desired to speak  
to some of the inhabitants of the shores of the Caspian sea, who  
give evidence that this must be the true Caucasus, and that though  
their mountains bear the same name, yet these are higher; and to  
confirm this in the Scythian tongue Caucasus means a very high  
[
Footnote 68: Caucasus; Herodot Kaoxaais; Armen. Kaukaz.] peak, and  
in fact we have no information of there being, in the East or in the  
West, any mountain so high. And the proof of this is that the  
1074  


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