The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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they occur in the originals would at all fulfil his intentions. No  
reader could find his way through such a labyrinth; Leonardo himself  
could not have done it.  
Added to this, more than half of the five thousand manuscript pages  
which now remain to us, are written on loose leaves, and at present  
arranged in a manner which has no justification beyond the fancy of  
the collector who first brought them together to make volumes of  
more or less extent. Nay, even in the volumes, the pages of which  
were numbered by Leonardo himself, their order, so far as the  
connection of the texts was concerned, was obviously a matter of  
indifference to him. The only point he seems to have kept in view,  
when first writing down his notes, was that each observation should  
be complete to the end on the page on which it was begun. The  
exceptions to this rule are extremely few, and it is certainly  
noteworthy that we find in such cases, in bound volumes with his  
numbered pages, the written observations: "turn over", "This is the  
continuation of the previous page", and the like. Is not this  
sufficient to prove that it was only in quite exceptional cases that  
the writer intended the consecutive pages to remain connected, when  
he should, at last, carry out the often planned arrangement of his  
writings?  
What this final arrangement was to be, Leonardo has in most cases  
indicated with considerable completeness. In other cases this  
authoritative clue is wanting, but the difficulties arising from  
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