The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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carry sacks which they can at pleasure fill with air, and which in  
case of need they carry instead of the girth of the saddle above and  
at the side, and they are well covered with plates of cuir bouilli,  
in order that they may not be perforated by flights of arrows. Thus  
they have not on their minds their security in flight, when the  
victory is uncertain; a horse thus equipped enables four or five men  
to cross over at need.  
1
100.  
SMALL BOATS.  
The small boats used by the Assyrians were made of thin laths of  
willow plaited over rods also of willow, and bent into the form of a  
boat. They were daubed with fine mud soaked with oil or with  
turpentine, and reduced to a kind of mud which resisted the water  
and because pine would split; and always remained fresh; and they  
covered this sort of boats with the skins of oxen in safely crossing  
the river Sicuris of Spain, as is reported by Lucant; [Footnote 7:  
See Lucan's Pharsalia IV, 130: Utque habuit ripas Sicoris camposque  
reliquit, Primum cana salix madefacto vimine parvam Texitur in  
puppim, calsoque inducto juvenco Vectoris patiens tumidum supernatat  
amnem. Sic Venetus stagnante Pado, fusoque Britannus Navigat oceano,  
sic cum tenet omnia Nilus, Conseritur bibula Memphitis cymbo papyro.  
His ratibus transjecta manus festinat utrimque Succisam cavare nemus  
]
885  


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