The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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Seeing that he seldom stayed in the workshop, and that he ate a  
great deal, I sent him word that, if he liked I could deal with him  
separately for each thing that he might make, and would give him  
what we might agree to be a fair valuation. He took counsel with his  
neighbour and gave up his room, selling every thing, and went to  
find...  
Miscellaneous Records (1354. 1355).  
1
354.  
[Footnote: A puzzling passage, meant, as it would seem, for a jest.  
Compare the description of Giants in Dante, Inf. XXI and XXII.  
Perhaps Leonardo had the Giant Antaeus in his mind. Of him the myth  
relates that he was a son of Ge, that he fed on lions; that he  
hunted in Libya and killed the inhabitants. He enjoyed the  
peculiarity of renewing his strength whenever he fell and came in  
contact with his mother earth; but that Hercules lifted him up and  
so conquered and strangled him. Lucan gives a full account of the  
struggle. Pharsalia IV, 617. The reading of this passage, which is  
very indistinctly written, is in many places doubtful.]  
Dear Benedetto de' Pertarti. When the proud giant fell because of  
the bloody and miry state of the ground it was as though a mountain  
had fallen so that the country shook as with an earthquake, and  
terror fell on Pluto in hell. From the violence of the shock he lay  
1109  


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