The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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LIII, and Pl. LIV--where we also find some studies of foot soldiers  
fighting. On the sheet in the British Museum--Pl. LII, 2--we find,  
among others, one group of three horses galloping forwards: one  
horseman is thrown and protects himself with his buckler against the  
lance thrusts of two others on horseback, who try to pierce him as  
they ride past. The same action is repeated, with some variation, in  
two sketches in pen and ink on a third sheet, in the Accademia at  
Venice, Pl. LV; a coincidence which suggests the probability of such  
an incident having actually been represented on the cartoon. We are  
not, it is true, in a position to declare with any certainty which  
of these three dissimilar sketches may have been the nearest to the  
group finally adopted in executing the cartoon.  
With regard, however, to one of the groups of horsemen it is  
possible to determine with perfect certainty not only which  
arrangement was preferred, but the position it occupied in the  
composition. The group of horsemen on Pl. LVII is a drawing in black  
chalk at Windsor, which is there attributed to Leonardo, but which  
appears to me to be the work of Cesare da Sesto, and the  
Commendatore Giov. Morelli supports me in this view. It can hardly  
be doubted that da Sesto, as a pupil of Leonardo's, made this  
drawing from his master's cartoon, if we compare it with the copy  
made by Raphael--here reproduced, for just above the fighting  
horseman in Raphael's copy it is possible to detect a horse which is  
seen from behind, going at a slower pace, with his tail flying out  
to the right and the same horse may be seen in the very same  
476  


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