The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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This animal, with his thundering roar, rouses his young the third  
day after they are born, teaching them the use of all their dormant  
senses and all the wild things which are in the wood flee away.  
This may be compared to the children of Virtue who are roused by the  
sound of praise and grow up in honourable studies, by which they are  
more and more elevated; while all that is base flies at the sound,  
shunning those who are virtuous.  
Again, the lion covers over its foot tracks, so that the way it has  
gone may not be known to its enemies. Thus it beseems a captain to  
conceal the secrets of his mind so that the enemy may not know his  
purpose.  
1
244.  
THE TARANTULA.  
The bite of the tarantula fixes a man's mind on one idea; that is on  
the thing he was thinking of when he was bitten.  
THE SCREECH-OWL AND THE OWL.  
These punish those who are scoffing at them by pecking out their  
eyes; for nature has so ordered it, that they may thus be fed.  
973  


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