The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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OF TREES.  
What outlines are seen in trees at a distance against the sky which  
serves as their background?  
The outlines of the ramification of trees, where they lie against  
the illuminated sky, display a form which more nearly approaches the  
spherical on proportion as they are remote, and the nearer they are  
the less they appear in this spherical form; as in the first tree  
a which, being near to the eye, displays the true form of its  
ramification; but this shows less in b and is altogether lost in  
c, where not merely the branches of the tree cannot be seen but  
the whole tree is distinguished with difficulty. Every object in  
shadow, of whatever form it may be, at a great distance appears to  
be spherical. And this occurs because, if it is a square body, at a  
very short distance it loses its angles, and a little farther off it  
loses still more of its smaller sides which remain. And thus before  
the whole is lost [to sight] the parts are lost, being smaller than  
the whole; as a man, who in such a distant position loses his legs,  
arms and head before [the mass of] his body, then the outlines of  
length are lost before those of breadth, and where they have become  
equal it would be a square if the angles remained; but as they are  
lost it is round.  
[Footnote: The sketch No. 4, Pl. XXVIII, belongs to this passage.]  
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