The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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[
Footnote: See Pl. XXVII, No. 5.]  
4
18.  
A leaf always turns its upper side towards the sky so that it may  
the better receive, on all its surface, the dew which drops gently  
from the atmosphere. And these leaves are so distributed on the  
plant as that one shall cover the other as little as possible, but  
shall lie alternately one above another as may be seen in the ivy  
which covers the walls. And this alternation serves two ends; that  
is, to leave intervals by which the air and sun may penetrate  
between them. The 2nd reason is that the drops which fall from the  
first leaf may fall onto the fourth or--in other trees--onto the  
sixth.  
4
19.  
Every shoot and every fruit is produced above the insertion [in the  
axil] of its leaf which serves it as a mother, giving it water from  
the rain and moisture from the dew which falls at night from above,  
and often it protects them against the too great heat of the rays of  
the sun.  
LIGHT ON BRANCHES AND LEAVES (420--422).  
301  


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