The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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Now you see that the hope and the desire of returning home and to  
one's former state is like the moth to the light, and that the man  
who with constant longing awaits with joy each new spring time, each  
new summer, each new month and new year--deeming that the things he  
longs for are ever too late in coming--does not perceive that he is  
longing for his own destruction. But this desire is the very  
quintessence, the spirit of the elements, which finding itself  
imprisoned with the soul is ever longing to return from the human  
body to its giver. And you must know that this same longing is that  
quintessence, inseparable from nature, and that man is the image of  
the world.  
1
163.  
O Time! consumer of all things; O envious age! thou dost destroy all  
things and devour all things with the relentless teeth of years,  
little by little in a slow death. Helen, when she looked in her  
mirror, seeing the withered wrinkles made in her face by old age,  
wept and wondered why she had twice been carried away.  
O Time! consumer of all things, and O envious age! by which all  
things are all devoured.  
Death.  
1
164.  
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