The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


google search for The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete

Return to Master Book Index.

Page
952 953 954 955 956

Quick Jump
1 306 613 919 1225

ordinary habits, by occasionally not completing the text on the page  
it is begun. These brief notes of a somewhat mysterious bearing have  
been placed here, simply because they may possibly have been  
intended to serve as hints for fables or allegories. They can  
scarcely be regarded as preparatory for a natural history, rather  
they would seem to be extracts. On the one hand the names of some of  
the animals seem to prove that Leonardo could not here be recording  
observations of his own; on the other hand the notes on their habits  
and life appear to me to dwell precisely on what must have  
interested him most--so far as it is possible to form any complete  
estimate of his nature and tastes.  
In No. 1293 lines 1-10, we have a sketch of a scheme for  
grouping the Prophecies. I have not however availed myself of it as  
a clue to their arrangement here because, in the first place, the  
texts are not so numerous as to render the suggested classification  
useful to the reader, and, also, because in reading the long series,  
as they occur in the original, we may follow the author's mind; and  
here and there it is not difficult to see how one theme suggested  
another. I have however regarded Leonardo's scheme for the  
classification of the Prophecies as available for that of the Fables  
and Jests, and have adhered to it as far as possible.  
Among the humourous writings I might perhaps have included the  
'
Rebusses', of which there are several in the collection of  
Leonardo's drawings at Windsor; it seems to me not likely that many  
54  
9


Page
952 953 954 955 956

Quick Jump
1 306 613 919 1225