The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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Leonardo. It seems to imply that Leonardo was disdainful of diligent  
labour. With regard to the second, referring to Leonardo's morality  
and dealings with his fellow men, Vasari himself nullifies it by  
asserting the very contrary in several passages. A further  
refutation may be found in the following sentence from the letter in  
which Melsi, the young Milanese nobleman, announces the Master's  
death to Leonardo's brothers: Credo siate certificati della morte  
di Maestro Lionardo fratello vostro, e mio quanto optimo padre, per  
la cui morte sarebbe impossibile che io potesse esprimere il dolore  
che io ho preso; e in mentre che queste mia membra si sosterranno  
insieme, io possedero una perpetua infelicita, e meritamente perche  
sviscerato et ardentissimo amore mi portava giornalmente. E dolto ad  
ognuno la perdita di tal uomo, quale non e piu in podesta della  
natura, ecc.  
It is true that, in April 1476, we find the names of Leonardo and  
Verrocchio entered in the "Libro degli Uffiziali di notte e de'  
Monasteri" as breaking the laws; but we immediately after find the  
note "Absoluti cum condizione ut retamburentur" (Tamburini was the  
name given to the warrant cases of the night police). The acquittal  
therefore did not exclude the possibility of a repetition of the  
charge. It was in fact repeated, two months later, and on this  
occasion the Master and his pupil were again fully acquitted.  
Verrocchio was at this time forty and Leonardo four-and-twenty. The  
documents referring to this affair are in the State Archives of  
Florence; they have been withheld from publication, but it seemed to  
912  


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