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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54827 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54827)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Leonardo da Vinci, Pathfinder of Science, by
-Henry Sampson Gillette
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Leonardo da Vinci, Pathfinder of Science
-
-Author: Henry Sampson Gillette
-
-Release Date: June 2, 2017 [EBook #54827]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LEONARDO DA VINCI, PATHFINDER OF SCIENCE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: _Portrait of Leonardo da Vinci, after a woodcut
- published in_ Lives of the Painters, _by Vasari. The Latin
- inscription reads_
- LIONARDO DA VINCI PITT. E SCVLTOR FIOR.
- _Leonardo da Vinci, Painter & Sculptor of Florence._]
-
-
-
-
- _Immortals of Science_
-
-
-
-
- LEONARDO
- DA VINCI
- _Pathfinder of Science_
-
-
- _Henry S. Gillette_
-
- PICTURES BY THE AUTHOR
-
-
- _Franklin Watts, Inc., 575 Lexington Avenue
- New York 22, New York_
-
-
- _To my wife Trudy_
-
- FIRST PRINTING
-
- _Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 62-8426_
- Copyright © 1962 by Franklin Watts, Inc.
- _Manufactured in the United States of America_
-
- DESIGNED BY BERNARD KLEIN
-
-
-AUTHOR’S NOTE
-
-It is natural that, within the confines of these few pages, many facets
-of Leonardo’s extraordinary personality will be missing. That he was an
-artist, a man of letters, a poet and a philosopher are well known. That
-he was also a man of humor, as well as a prophet whose vision extended
-far beyond his times, are facts that I have also tried to include in
-this biography. There are many gaps in our knowledge of his life, and
-these I have sometimes filled with my own imagination to give some
-continuity to his story. Little is known of his early days, his period
-of travels after leaving Milan and his years in Rome. There is, too, a
-certain mystery in his relations to those around him, since our
-descriptions of him derive mostly from his often cryptic, personal notes
-and from biographers who wrote of him many years after he had died.
-
-This book is about Leonardo the scientist, and to fully write of his
-many accomplishments would require an encyclopedic mind. My intent has
-been to extract the essence of his story in the hopes that it would
-arouse the enthusiasm of a reader to further his interest in those
-other, more fully documented books—and, above all, in the notebooks that
-Leonardo himself wrote.
-
- —H. S. G.
-
- _Rome, August 1961_
-
-
-
-
- _Contents_
-
-
- 1 _The Shield_ 1
- 2 _Florence_ 9
- 3 _A Studio of His Own_ 20
- 4 _Years of Frustration_ 28
- 5 _Milan_ 37
- 6 _The Monument_ 49
- 7 _Success_ 60
- 8 _The French_ 73
- 9 _Cesare Borgia_ 86
- 10 _Shattered Hopes_ 98
- 11 _The Return to Milan_ 114
- 12 _Rome_ 129
- 13 _The Last Years_ 147
- 14 _Mankind’s Debt to Leonardo_ 159
- _Significant Dates in Leonardo’s Life_ 162
- _Index_ 164
-
-
-
-
- 1
- _The Shield_
-
-
-Dusk was beginning to gather in the valley at the foot of Monte Albano
-as young Leonardo turned toward home. Stopping by a rushing stream to
-wash the dust of the day’s explorations from his face, he laid aside his
-cap and his leather pouch and plunged his hands into the cold mountain
-water. He felt the force of the current and watched the whirl and flow
-of bubbles around his bare arms. There was the same feeling, he thought,
-to the flow of air he had experienced blowing around the rocky crags of
-the mountains.
-
-This evening, however, there was no time to sit awhile and think. He was
-in a hurry to get home. Hastily scooping the water in his cupped palms,
-he splashed it over his head and face, then shaking the water from his
-hair he rose and picked up his cap. He took a satisfied look in his
-pouch, slung it over his shoulder and headed down the stony trail to the
-village of Vinci.
-
-Vinci was a small hill town situated on a spur of Monte Albano. Its
-castle and the bell tower above the houses seemed like sentinels
-guarding the slopes of vineyards and olive groves spreading down into
-the valley.
-
-Leonardo da Vinci, which means “Leonardo from the town of Vinci,”
-thought about his home. He knew that he had been born in Anchiano, near
-Vinci, on April 15 of the year 1452, to a peasant girl named Caterina.
-At the age of five, he had been sent for by his natural father, Piero da
-Vinci, to come and live at his family’s house in Vinci, a comfortable
-and roomy place with a spacious garden. Piero, five years before, had
-married Albiera di Giovanni Amadori, a girl of sixteen. They had had no
-children of their own, and Leonardo was welcomed into the home with
-affection by his young stepmother.
-
-When Leonardo was about eleven, young Albiera died, leaving a darkened
-and saddened house. Two years later his father married another girl by
-the name of Francesca Lanfredini. Although laughter and song soon
-replaced the grief, Leonardo never forgot the love of his first
-stepmother.
-
-Also in the house lived Antonio, his grandfather, who was eighty-five,
-his grandmother, his uncle Allessandro Amadori and family, and, best of
-all, his uncle Francesco. The da Vincis, who could trace their
-beginnings in the town back to the thirteenth century, had always been
-respected lawyers and landowners. Because Uncle Francesco was neither a
-lawyer nor a great landowner, the people of the town said he did
-nothing; but he tended the family vineyards, and, to the delight of
-Leonardo, he raised his own silkworms.
-
-As Leonardo entered the main gate, he noticed that the oil lamps were
-being lit above the stalls of the marketplace, and the lively confusion
-of the last hours of business was in full swing. People nodded and
-smiled to him, for as a boy of fifteen he was already a striking figure.
-He was tall with long, auburn hair falling to his shoulders and his face
-was so charming that it was frequently compared to those of the angels
-painted in the chapels of the church. The music of his lute, the sound
-of his voice, and the gentleness of his person were such that all hearts
-and doors were open to him.
-
-Tonight, however, Leonardo avoided the usual invitations to stop and
-chat. His father would be back from Florence; he had been going there
-more and more frequently as his fame as a lawyer grew. Now Leonardo was
-thinking that he had almost finished the assignment his father, half
-jokingly, had given him many weeks ago—so many weeks ago that he was
-sure his father had forgotten about it. At that time a peasant, whose
-skill in providing fish and game for the table of Piero’s big household
-was greatly appreciated, had asked a favor of him. This man had a round,
-wooden shield cut from a fig tree and he had asked Piero to have a
-design painted on it for him in Florence. Piero, who had noticed the
-sketches his son was making of plants, rock formations, and scenes in
-his wanderings about the countryside, decided to test his son’s ability
-and gave the shield to the boy. In the secrecy of his room, into which
-no one was allowed, Leonardo had smoothed and prepared the wood, and on
-it he was painting a monster.
-
-Scrambling over rocks, through streams, and into caves, Leonardo had
-been in the habit of gathering all manner of creeping and crawling life.
-Patiently he would bring these home in his leather pouch and carefully
-study and draw them. Maggots, bats, butterflies, locusts, and snakes
-added to the confusion of the boy’s already cluttered room. Everywhere
-he went he collected the things that aroused his curiosity; and as a
-result, his room was always filled with rocks, dried plants, flowers,
-the skeletons of small animals—and his pages of notations and drawings.
-Now Leonardo had combined the features of these small forms of life to
-make a monster—emerging from a dark grotto and breathing fire and
-smoke—a thing more terrifying than if done from imagination, for each
-feature was a duplicate of a reality in nature.
-
-Unobserved, Leonardo reached the privacy of his room and emptied this
-day’s collection on a table beside the shield. He lit a candle and
-examined his catch—a lizard and a large grasshopper. These would
-complete his picture; and, the most extraordinary find of the day—a
-fossil seashell found high on the slopes of a mountain! How did it get
-there? Was it a result of the flood about which his religion had taught
-him? Had an immense wave deposited this ancient sea-life high on the
-Albano mountains? Looking more closely he saw that it was a type of
-sea-snail and in almost perfect preservation. This he would have to
-think about and examine later.
-
-Now, however, the picture must be completed, for he hoped to surprise
-his father in the morning. But just then, Leonardo heard the family
-stirring below and his father calling him to dinner. Reluctantly he left
-his table, made himself presentable and went downstairs.
-
-“Ah, Leonardo,” his father said when he appeared in the family dining
-room. “I saw Benedetto dell’Abbaco on the way in town and he tells me
-you haven’t been to school as often as you should—is that true?”
-
-“Yes, Papa—but I’m not doing badly.”
-
-“Signor Benedetto might agree, at least in your mathematics. He tells me
-you ask him questions that often make him stop and think. But Leonardo,
-you have other subjects—Latin, reading, and writing—as well as
-arithmetic. You mustn’t neglect the others, my boy. But come—let us
-eat.”
-
-Together they sat down with the rest of the family—a large, prosperous,
-and happy gathering. When dinner was over Leonardo made hurried excuses
-to all the family, protesting that he was too tired to sing, and escaped
-back into his room. For a long time he worked, unaware that the house
-was growing quieter. Finally he laid down his brushes and his maul
-stick, pushed his chair back and smiled a triumphant smile. The shield
-was finished. Tomorrow he would ask his father in to look at it.
-
-Conscious now that everybody had gone to bed, Leonardo blew out his
-candle and opened the shutters. The night sky was a panoply of stars and
-only here and there was the dark loneliness of the valley relieved by
-pinpoints of light. Leonardo leaned his head against the window frame
-and stared at the blue infinity above him. What exactly were the stars?
-Did all of them move around the earth? What was the haze that obscured
-the horizon ever so faintly? What was that sea-snail doing in the
-mountains? Why? How?
-
-The next morning Leonardo found his father and Uncle Francesco in the
-garden deep in conversation about their vineyards and olive groves.
-
-“Papa, I have a surprise for you up in my room—can you come now?”
-
-“Yes, Leonardo. What is it you have found now—not a better way to raise
-my grapes, I’ll wager!”
-
-The elder da Vinci put his arm around the boy’s shoulder and went with
-him up to the door of his room.
-
-“Wait here, Papa, until I say to come in.”
-
-Leonardo unlocked his door, lifted the cloth from the shield standing on
-the easel and opened the shutter just a trifle so that a soft light
-filled the room.
-
-“Papa—you can come in now.”
-
-Piero entered—he had long forgotten the round piece of wood—and suddenly
-he froze in the middle of the room.
-
-“Have mercy on me!” he said when he saw the horrible fire-breathing
-creature. In the dimness of the room, the monster and the murky cave
-from which it was emerging were terribly real. Piero actually started to
-back out of the room in fright, when Leonardo laid a hand on his
-shoulder.
-
-“Papa, this work has served its purpose; take it away, then, for it has
-produced the intended effect.”
-
-The shield was the talk of the house; it was set up and marveled at. As
-for Piero, he resolved to take it with him to Florence secretly and sell
-it, giving his peasant friend some cheap substitute that he would buy in
-the marketplace.
-
-So, a few days later, Leonardo’s father saddled his horse and had the
-shield wrapped and packed in his saddlebag. Also, unknown to his son, he
-took some of the boy’s drawings. Piero had now realized that Leonardo
-might have a rare talent. Moreover, he was planning to move to Florence
-with his family so that he could be nearer to the Badia, or the law
-offices of the city, for whom he had been frequently employed. There,
-thought Piero, Leonardo’s talent could be developed under the best of
-teachers.
-
-It was many days before Leonardo’s father returned; when he did, he
-gathered his family together and it was obvious to all that he had
-exciting news. First, Piero announced that he and Francesca would move
-to Florence since he and a law partner were now engaged in securing
-office space from the Badia. It was a handsome office centrally located
-opposite the palace of the _Podestà_, or chief magistrate.
-
-Then, turning to Leonardo, he said: “I have shown some of your drawings
-to Master Andrea del Verrochio and his enthusiasm for your skill has
-decided me to place you in his studio as an apprentice. What do you
-think of that?”
-
-Leonardo was stunned. Verrochio, the great artist and sculptor!
-Florence! The city-state whose power and influence had spread far beyond
-her own walls. Now he would study in earnest; now he would find the
-answers to his never-ending questions. He embraced his father and could
-say nothing.
-
-
-
-
- 2
- _Florence_
-
-
-The Italy of Medieval and Renaissance days was not a unified country as
-it is today. It was, of course, part of the Holy Roman Empire, but the
-main governing forces in the land were in the city-states, of which
-Florence was one of the most powerful. A city-state was much more than a
-city—it was almost a kingdom in itself. Each had its own army, and very
-often there were large-scale wars between such city-states as Milan,
-Naples, Rome, Venice—and of course Florence. The Italians of those days
-considered themselves citizens—not of Italy as a whole—but of their
-particular cities; people coming from other cities were looked upon as
-“foreigners,” even though they looked the same, wore the same style of
-clothing, and spoke the same language!
-
-All the power, influence, and ideas of this period in history were
-concentrated within the city-states. A man might be a very fine artist,
-engineer, or philosopher, but unless he managed to bring his work to the
-attention of the ruler of one of the cities, he was likely to remain in
-obscurity. Thus it was that Piero da Vinci, knowing that his son would
-have to have a powerful patron if he was to succeed at all, brought
-Leonardo to Florence.
-
-In 1467, when the da Vinci family entered Florence, the city had been
-under the rule of the Medici family for some thirty-three years. As it
-was in most of these city-states, the head of the ruling family—at this
-time Piero de’ Medici—was in charge of the government of Florence and
-the surrounding countryside. But Piero was fifty-one years old and
-ailing, and he had only two years of life left at the time of Leonardo’s
-arrival.
-
-
-None of this was in Leonardo’s mind as he rode with his father through
-one of the great, guarded gates of the city. He was thinking, not of
-politics, but of the fabulous sights that awaited him in this rich
-center of commerce and activity.
-
-The narrow streets of the city were so crowded that is was necessary for
-the da Vinci family, together with their servants and the donkeys laden
-with household effects, to go single file. Leonardo rode behind his
-father, shouting questions, and, at the same time, turning his head from
-side to side so as not to miss a thing. Brought up in the solitude of
-mountains and valleys, and accustomed to the quiet life of a village,
-the boy of fifteen was overwhelmed with the excitement of the city.
-
- [Illustration: _Leonardo rode behind his father, turning his head
- from side to side so as not to miss a thing._]
-
-The party was now making its way past the booths of hundreds of shops,
-past magnificent palaces built by wealthy merchants, and across squares
-filled with the produce from hundreds of farms. Every now and then,
-Leonardo caught a glimpse of the cathedral dome, one of the
-architectural marvels of its day. He had seen the cathedral with its
-bell tower and also the towering spire of the Palazzo della
-Signoria—which means the Palace of the Lords—from a hill as they
-approached the city. This palace still stands and today it is called the
-Palazzo Vecchio or Old Palace. But now these sights were lost to view in
-the midst of the narrow streets, other churches, flags, and the lines of
-washing that seemed to hang everywhere. Frequently, Piero’s party was
-pressed against a wall as a procession shoved its way through a street.
-Sometimes it was by armed horsemen escorting a rich banker to some
-appointment; other times it was a file of cowled monks observing some
-saint’s day and carrying huge wax candles before them.
-
-After they had crossed the magnificent square of the Signoria, in front
-of the Palace of the same name, Piero leaned down from his horse and
-asked a blacksmith where Verrochio’s studio might be. The man shouted
-above the din of clanging hammers:
-
-“Everybody knows that shop, Signor—it’s down that street and to the
-right! You can’t miss it—ask anybody!”
-
-The man was right, for the workshop of Verrochio was not hard to find.
-Verrochio was considered one of Florence’s finest artists and everybody
-knew of him. He was a short, broad-shouldered man of thirty-two with a
-round face, shrewd eyes, a thin mouth and dark curly hair that reached
-almost to his shoulders. In his workshop were two other
-apprentices—young Pietro Perugino, who was six years older than
-Leonardo, and Lorenzo di Credi, a boy of eight. They all lived in the
-house together and, after Leonardo was shown where he would sleep and
-had put away the few things he had brought with him from Vinci, he was
-taken to the place where he would work.
-
-Verrochio, whose real name was Andrea di Michele di Francesco de’ Cioni,
-had taken the name of his teacher, a renowned goldsmith, as was the
-custom in the shops at that time. Verrochio himself was a skilled
-goldsmith. But to be an artist and to have your own workshop in the year
-1467 meant being a specialist in many things. Into Verrochio’s place
-came a great variety of artistic work—painting pictures, sculpting and
-architecture, goldsmithing, designing and making armor, creating
-decorated furniture, designing mechanical toys, and even preparing stage
-scenery.
-
-Verrochio, of course, would attend to the greater creative tasks, while
-his apprentices did the chores of grinding colors, preparing panels for
-painting, making armatures for his sculpture, hewing to size the marble
-for a statue, preparing molds for casting, building models for a new
-palace or church—in fact, all the countless number of preparations to
-the finished work. Sometimes, if an apprentice showed extraordinary
-talent, he would be allowed to work on the finished painting or assist
-with the final strokes of the chisel. Verrochio was a busy man and a
-successful artisan. To further his own ambitions, he was now absorbed in
-the perfecting of mathematical perspective and the study of geometry.
-
-The curious Leonardo had come to the right man. In Verrochio’s workshop,
-where so many crafts were learned at the same time, his powers of
-observation were able to develop; his hunger to know about mathematics
-was fed. In Verrochio, Leonardo found a teacher who would encourage
-these investigations and urge him to study a wide variety of subjects.
-Leonardo now felt his lack of a fuller education. He started to borrow
-mathematics textbooks and to seek out men who could teach him what he
-needed to know. After each day’s work was over, Leonardo would continue
-on into the night, catching up on his neglected studies and discovering
-for himself new areas of thought such as anatomy, movement and weight,
-botany, and another subject which was to occupy much of his later
-years—_hydraulics_, or the useful application of water power.
-
-In these early years, Leonardo commenced his famous _Notes_. He had
-developed his own “secret” writing in his childhood at Vinci. These
-notes—consisting of observations, proportions, and reminders to
-himself—were inscribed on his drawings. They were, however, unreadable
-to the eye—until held up to a mirror. Leonardo was lefthanded and could
-write fluently in this strange manner. It could have been for many
-reasons that he did so—perhaps from a natural desire for secrecy,
-perhaps for reasons of safety from possible enemies. In those days,
-plots and counterplots of all sorts were commonplace—a rumor or a
-whisper in the right ear could destroy a reputation or financially ruin
-a career.
-
-Leonardo was popular in Florence. He traveled with the young men of the
-town, and his handsome appearance and enormous strength (he could bend a
-horseshoe in his hands) made him a welcome figure in many houses. He
-continued to play the lute and the lyre. He wrote poetry, composed his
-own music, and sang with a pleasing voice. His blue eyes were kind and
-his manner gentle. He always avoided arguments and competition when he
-could. When he walked through the marketplace and came upon the caged
-birds, he would buy them—just to set them free. Indeed, his love of
-animals had become so great that he no longer ate meat.
-
-During these years in Verrochio’s service, Leonardo grew in stature as
-an artist and rapidly developed into a scientist of promise. He amazed
-his master when he painted an angel in an altarpiece that had been
-assigned to Verrochio. He painted it in the new oil colors recently
-acquired from the Flemish painters. So astounded was Verrochio with its
-grace that the master vowed he would never lift a brush again if a “mere
-child” could so surpass him. In this picture there is a tuft of grass
-beside a kneeling figure, also painted by Leonardo, which indicates by
-its careful attention to detail the amount of research he did before
-committing it to canvas. In other paintings he made beautiful drawings
-of a lily and studies of animals and crabs, giving a hint of what was to
-come. For, in these preparatory works, Leonardo could not be satisfied
-until he had thoroughly studied the characteristics of plants and
-animals in general. Later in life, he was to become more and more
-absorbed in these researches until they occupied the greater part of his
-time.
-
-In 1469, when Leonardo had been in Florence only two short years, Piero
-de’ Medici died and was succeeded by his son, the mighty Lorenzo de’
-Medici—or Lorenzo the Magnificent, as he was often called. Now the city
-of Florence felt itself under the control of a man who really knew how
-to use power. Lorenzo was Florence; nothing happened without his making
-it happen, and he became one of the most prominent patrons of art and
-scholarship in all of Italy. If Leonardo was to make any headway in
-Florence, he would have to make himself noticed by this new Medici
-ruler.
-
-But Leonardo was not yet worrying about how to make himself a success. A
-young man of seventeen and still an apprentice of Verrochio, Leonardo
-continued to meet new friends with new ideas. It was at about this time
-that he met Benedetto Aritmetico, a prominent scholar and mathematician.
-It is probable that this man drew Leonardo’s attention to the practical
-needs of industry and commerce so that some of Leonardo’s energy was
-directed toward the study and improvement of existing machinery and the
-invention of labor-saving devices. At any rate, during these months
-Leonardo was walking the streets of Florence, wandering into shops and
-mills, making careful observations of all the various methods of
-manufacturing. The more he saw, the more he thought to himself that one
-man could do the work of many—if only he had the proper machine. He even
-made drawings of laborers with picks and shovels to see if he could
-determine by mathematics better ways to swing and hold the tools.
-
-In addition, the particular problems in the engagement of joints
-fascinated Leonardo, leading him on to the study of more general
-problems such as the transmission of power by gears and the strength of
-materials. He also spent long hours studying geometrical theories and
-reading Greek and Latin classical works. Laboriously, he translated
-these into his own formulas and made comments about them in his
-notebooks. He attended the lectures of John Argyropoulos, a Greek, who
-talked of the Aristotelian theories of natural history, and who had
-translated Aristotle’s _Physics_.
-
-The study of physics opened to Leonardo a whole new world of ideas. He
-experimented with cogwheels, and with the improvement of ways to lift
-weights. He became fascinated with the then-known laws of friction and
-built a bench upon which he tested various devices for the overcoming of
-frictional drag; he also tested the natural power of one body to set
-another in motion. This bench with its rollers and weights was similar
-in principle to the one used by the French physicist A. C. Coulomb
-almost three centuries later. Leonardo was indeed growing into a man of
-genius. Now everything from the stars to the flight of an insect
-occupied his thoughts.
-
-At the same time, he continued his studies of drawing and painting.
-Frequently he was seen in Florence following someone whose face had
-interested him—sometimes for the better part of the day—and then at
-night he would fill a page with sketches of this same person from
-memory.
-
-By developing his powers of observation in this way Leonardo came to
-rely more upon his own experiences and less upon what he was told or
-what he read. This brought him into frequent conflict with the
-astrologers, the alchemists and even the Church. The astrologers were
-men who told fortunes by the movements of the stars. The alchemists,
-with their knowledge of chemistry, pretended to be able to talk with
-ghosts and to tell the future. These men Leonardo held in contempt.
-Although he was a devoutly religious man, Leonardo objected to many
-attitudes of the Church which he considered outmoded and which stood in
-the way of scientific progress; because of these objections, he was
-frequently called a pagan.
-
-In this same year of 1469, Leonardo met the aging Paolo del Pozzo
-Toscanelli. Toscanelli was a famous physician, philosopher and
-mathematician who, just the previous year, had marked off on the
-cathedral floor the famous meridian line for determining the dates of
-the various Church holidays. The old man and the boy became not only the
-famous teacher and ardent pupil, but close friends.
-
-One evening at Toscanelli’s house, the old man showed young Leonardo a
-globe of the world. Much of it was marked “unknown,” but Toscanelli had
-filled in some areas from his own careful calculations and from the
-stories told him by sailors and travelers. Visions of distant lands,
-remote mountain ranges and vast oceans filled Leonardo’s imagination as
-Toscanelli spoke. Then Toscanelli tapped the globe to the westward of
-Spain, saying:
-
-“Here will be found a quicker route to India than the world has ever
-known before.” Then, turning to Leonardo he murmured, “You will see it
-happen, my boy, in your lifetime.”
-
-One by one, Leonardo’s childhood questions were being answered.
-Toscanelli told him much about the stars, the fossils of creatures long
-disappeared from the world, and how he believed the earth’s early
-formation took place. He also taught the boy the art of drawing a map.
-Not only did Toscanelli greatly influence Leonardo, but the course of
-history as well. Ten years after Toscanelli had died, Christopher
-Columbus, struggling westward over the Atlantic Ocean, was using a map
-that old Toscanelli had sent him, carefully notated with all his
-accumulated wisdom.
-
-Leonardo, in keeping with his own philosophy, tested all this knowledge
-with experiments of his own. Because astronomical instruments were rare,
-crude, and costly, Leonardo borrowed them where he could and later set
-about making his own. He went on to experiment with time measurements,
-devising the first example of the application of a pendulum to regulate
-a clock; by means of two springs, it measured the minutes as well as the
-hours. So for the next three years Leonardo worked in Verrochio’s studio
-and continued his studies and experiments.
-
-In 1472 Leonardo’s name was inscribed in the Red Book of the Painters of
-Florence, which was the official _guild_, or artists’ union of that
-time. But he was so poor that he couldn’t afford the dues and hardly had
-the money for the necessary candles to be burnt before St. Luke, the
-patron saint of all painters. Although his father now had a spacious
-apartment in a house on one of the main squares of Florence, Leonardo
-continued to live with Verrochio. In fact, he stayed on past his formal
-training period for about four more years, grateful to the kindly man
-for the food and bed he offered.
-
-
-
-
- 3
- _A Studio of His Own_
-
-
-On Sunday, April 26, 1478, the bells of the cathedral were ringing
-loudly over Florence, almost drowning out the noise of the crowds in the
-street. Shutters were being thrown open and people were shouting excited
-questions at each other. Distantly at first, but growing in volume, was
-another sound—an ugly one—the sound of an approaching, angry mob.
-Leonardo, holding a roll of drawings closer under his arm, stopped and
-listened.
-
-Suddenly the questioning voices stopped. The bells continued ringing and
-now the angry shouts of the mob could be heard.
-
-“Lorenzo is dead! Giuliano is dead! Death to traitors! Pazzi! Pazzi!”
-
-“On to the Palace of the Signoria! They’ve captured the Archbishop! He’s
-a prisoner there!”
-
-“Get a ram and we’ll break the door down!”
-
-The people in the street were caught up in the surging mass. Already
-soldiers of the Medici were spreading out through the city. Cobblestones
-were ripped from the street, and swords, knives, and clubs were being
-brandished in the air.
-
-Leonardo, backed against a wall of a house, was soon left in an almost
-deserted street. Still holding the drawings, he made his way carefully
-back to his studio.
-
-As it turned out, Lorenzo was not dead at all.
-
-It was on this Sunday that the Pazzi conspiracy had broken out in
-Florence. In the cathedral, the ailing Giuliano de’ Medici, brother of
-Lorenzo, was killed by assassins. Lorenzo himself escaped with only a
-scratched arm. The Pazzi family were rival bankers of the Medicis and
-had joined in this plot with Girolamo Riario, a relative of Pope Sixtus
-IV, and Francesco Salviati, a long-time enemy of Lorenzo. A hired
-professional thug completed the members of the conspiracy.
-
-Girolamo Riario hated the Medicis because they refused him money for his
-own ambitions, and the Pope opposed Lorenzo because Lorenzo was
-supporting raids against papal territory. As for Archbishop Salviati, he
-had for years nursed a personal hatred for Lorenzo.
-
- [Illustration: _Leonardo, backed against a wall, was soon left in an
- almost deserted street._]
-
-When the assassination attempt failed, the Archbishop and Francesco de’
-Pazzi fled to the Palace of the Signoria for protection. However, the
-members of the Council of Florence, who were meeting, then became
-suspicious and bolted the doors after them. Both men were later killed
-by the Medici followers and their bodies were hung from the barred
-windows of the Palace. In the terror of the days afterward, eighty
-victims lost their lives. The Pazzi conspiracy also had an effect on
-Leonardo’s future, as we shall see later on.
-
-Leonardo had been on his way to the Palace that morning. He had been
-given his first painting assignment, or commission, the previous
-January. This was to paint an altarpiece for the chapel of San Bernardo
-in the Palace, and just the month before he had received the sum of
-twenty-five florins as a partial payment.
-
-Some time before January of 1478, Leonardo had left Verrochio and had
-found a place of his own. The commission had come to Leonardo through
-the influence of his father, who was now one of the leading notaries, or
-lawyers, of the city. Though still poor, Leonardo could now devote this
-new independence to his widening fields of study.
-
-Leonardo’s studio was like his childhood room in one respect—it was
-still filled with all the different things that had aroused his
-curiosity. Books were everywhere—on his tables and shelves and piled on
-the floor—books by Ptolemy, Pliny, and Strabo on geography and natural
-history, by Aristotle on physics, even one by Guido, a tenth-century
-monk, who has been called the father of modern music. In addition, there
-were books on arithmetic, agriculture, geometry, grammar, philosophy,
-fables, poetry and even one containing jokes. A map of the world hung on
-the wall, together with his drawings; and, scattered throughout the
-whole studio were the plants, fossils, rocks and animal skeletons he was
-still collecting from his trips into the country.
-
-There was also a huge table extending down the middle of Leonardo’s
-studio upon which were many drawings and instruments for working
-geometrical problems. His easel near the window supported a painting—a
-study for his commission in the Palazzo. And on his desk was a confusion
-of papers containing notes all written in his “secret” writing.
-
-At twenty-six Leonardo was deep in the study of mechanical law,
-geometry, and botany. For example, he had observed the rings in trees
-and their relationship to the age of the trees. In mechanics, he was
-absorbed in drawing models of a “variable speed drive.” By meshing three
-cogged wheels of different diameters to a common lantern wheel, Leonardo
-saw that different speeds of rotation could be obtained at the same
-time. This same principle is used in the gear shift of modern
-automobiles. About mechanics Leonardo wrote that it was “the paradise of
-the mathematical sciences because by means of it one comes to the fruit
-of mathematics.”
-
-Now, too, he was starting to write about his observations on the flight
-of birds, the formations of clouds and the behavior of smoke in the air.
-He compared the flying of birds to the swimming of fish in the sea, and
-the flow of air to the flow of water. Two hundred years before Newton,
-Leonardo would define the principles of aerodynamic reciprocity, as
-contained in Newton’s Third Law of Motion.
-
-At this time, Leonardo had an idea for making the Arno river navigable
-all the way from Florence to Pisa by the addition of canals, thus giving
-Florence an outlet to the sea. He also had thoughts for the improvement
-of irrigation in order to make use of land that did not have enough
-water. Nothing that Leonardo saw in his day’s activities was too small
-to pass unnoticed and unquestioned. The flight of a butterfly, the
-stratification of rock in a cliffside, the shape of a mighty cumulus
-cloud, the turning of a carriage wheel on a bumpy road, the play of
-muscles in a farmer’s back, the curling of water around a rock in a
-stream—all of these aroused Leonardo’s curiosity. Continually, he
-studied these things and painstakingly drew them and wrote about them in
-his notebooks.
-
-
-Unfortunately, Leonardo’s painting commission for the Palace of the
-Signoria was never completed. By the end of the year 1478, the Pope,
-angered by the killing of the Archbishop during the Pazzi conspiracy,
-had declared war on the Republic of Florence. Ferdinand, the King of
-Naples, was persuaded to help in this war against Florence and the
-Medicis. As the papal forces were approaching the fortresses on the
-Florentine hills, the Council of Florence discontinued Leonardo’s
-commission in order to conserve money for the defense of the city.
-
-Disappointed though he was, Leonardo did not allow this setback to
-discourage him. From a page of drawings in the Uffizi Gallery of
-Florence on which are sketched various arms and war materials, we learn
-that he turned from his artistic to his mechanical skills and began
-designing engines of war. Besides being a Florentine concerned with the
-defense of his city, Leonardo was eager to gain an appointment with
-Lorenzo as military engineer to make up for the painting commission he
-had just lost. Also, as the fifteenth century was a turning point in the
-methods of waging war, Leonardo was attracted to all the mechanical
-possibilities of the new artillery. Before then soldiers had used
-spears, bows and arrows, and stone-throwing catapults, among other
-primitive methods. One of Leonardo’s designs included a light cannon
-whose barrel could be raised or lowered to proper elevation by means of
-a hand-cranked screw and whose horizontal direction could be determined
-by a maneuverable cradle.
-
-The military appointment that Leonardo hoped for didn’t come.
-Unfortunately for the Medicis, the war with the papal forces was being
-lost. One by one, the fortresses under siege surrendered; more and more
-of the Florentine troops were fleeing.
-
-Leonardo continued the work on his military machines for, although he
-was having some success painting Madonnas for private homes and had even
-received a commission from the King of Portugal for a tapestry design,
-he still wanted official recognition for his inventions from Lorenzo de’
-Medici.
-
-During these weeks late in the year of 1479, Leonardo conceived many
-ingenious devices to wage war. Besides the small artillery piece, he
-designed a _bombard_, or rock-throwing cannon, which did not recoil when
-it was fired. This was followed by a light gun arranged in three tiers
-of barrels, mounted so that while one tier was fired, the second was
-being loaded and the third was cooling (a forerunner of the modern
-machine gun). Another was a device to repel enemy ladders. It consisted
-of a horizontal beam laid parallel to the top of a fortress wall; the
-beam could be pushed outward by one man or several men using a system of
-pulleys.
-
- [Illustration: _Leonardo’s design for a machine gun. It had
- thirty-three barrels in three banks of eleven each. While one bank
- was fired, one cooled and the other was reloaded._]
-
-Unfortunately for Leonardo, just as he was ready to show these
-inventions to Lorenzo de’ Medici, the last fortress outside Florence
-surrendered and a three-month truce followed. Lorenzo himself went to
-Naples and persuaded King Ferdinand to withdraw from the war. By 1480,
-peace returned once again to Florence.
-
-As for the Medicis, military machines no longer interested them. Greatly
-disappointed at not having his inventions used—or even looked
-at—Leonardo began to search about for new fields of creative activity.
-
-
-
-
- 4
- _Years Of Frustration_
-
-
-The old monk spread the papers out before him on the table.
-
-“Master Leonardo,” he said, “these are the terms of the commission. We
-at the monastery wish to have an altarpiece painted for our chapel. Your
-father has recommended you, and, as you know, he is our lawyer. Of
-course your reputation has already reached our ears, and we are
-satisfied in our choice.”
-
-The year was 1480. The monk represented the monastery of San Donato a
-Scopeto near the Porta Romana, just outside Florence. Leonardo shook his
-head slowly at the terms of the commission. The painting had to be
-completed in thirty months at the most. Moreover, he must pay for his
-own colors and even—Leonardo looked up as if to protest but resumed
-reading—even pay for any gold or gold leaf he might use. Nevertheless,
-it was an opportunity, and Leonardo needed work. Since the papal war had
-ended, he had not received any commissions—and his skill at military
-engineering was still too unknown to have won him recognition.
-
-Although Lorenzo de’ Medici was a great supporter of the arts and
-sciences, he had not granted Leonardo any of his patronage. In Lorenzo’s
-court were many men with much book-learning but little talent. They
-guarded their positions jealously and kept the way to Lorenzo barred to
-any applicant whom they did not like. Of them, Leonardo wrote in his
-notes: “They strut about puffed up and pompous, decked out and adorned,
-not with their own labors, but by those of others, and they will not
-even allow me my own. And if they despise me who am an inventor, how
-much more blame be given to themselves, who are not inventors but
-trumpeters and reciters of the work of others?”
-
-In accepting the commission to paint the altarpiece, Leonardo hoped to
-attract attention to himself. Perhaps then Lorenzo might welcome him to
-his court and grant him patronage. So, with his usual thoroughness,
-Leonardo set about the task of preparing an Adoration of the Magi—a
-favorite subject of that time. This was to be a picture of the Holy
-Family surrounded by the three wise men from the East, shepherds and
-animals, old and young, rich and poor, paying their adoration to the
-Christ child.
-
-Since he wanted his subjects perfect in every detail, Leonardo set about
-drawing countless youths, old men, sheep, oxen, horses, and donkeys. In
-a separate drawing for the background, he worked out with mathematical
-mastery the problems of perspective, that is, drawing objects to make
-them appear three-dimensional and either close or far away in space. In
-addition, he made studies for the composition of the whole
-picture—studies in which his knowledge of geometry was used to heighten
-the excitement of this great religious subject.
-
- [Illustration: _Leonardo’s hygrometer._]
-
-Among these sketches that Leonardo made for his “Adoration of the Magi”
-is a page on which appears an inspiration for one of his greatest
-masterpieces—a drawing of the “Last Supper.” And on this same page is
-another drawing—one of a hygrometer. A hygrometer is an instrument for
-measuring the amount of moisture in the air. Leonardo’s design consists
-of a simple, graded disk with a balanced pointer, weighted at one end
-with sand and at the other with a sponge or some salt. As the sponge or
-salt absorbed the moisture in the air, the added weight was indicated on
-the graded disk, thus measuring the amount of humidity.
-
-Leonardo’s researches for the altar painting took him almost a year.
-Although the monks began to grumble at his slowness, Leonardo would not
-be hurried. He was determined to produce a painting that was perfect in
-all respects. To quiet their impatience Leonardo did odd jobs for them
-in the cloister. He repainted their old clock and for this extra work
-they advanced him some much-needed money. In March of 1481 Leonardo was
-ready to begin the actual drawing for the altarpiece. As he progressed
-with the composition, the monks crowded around with exclamations of
-delight. So different was it from all the other Adoration pictures they
-had ever seen, that the monks sent Leonardo some sacks of corn as a
-token of their appreciation.
-
-One day, Leonardo was walking slowly toward the monastery over the Ponte
-Vecchio—the Old Bridge—across the Arno River. He made his way slowly up
-the hill past the construction for the new Pitti Palace. The morning was
-hot and the farmers moving into the city with their heavily laden carts
-were short-tempered. Leonardo stood to one side as he watched a pair of
-oxen straining to haul a wagon up a rise in the road. Their owner, his
-shirt unbuttoned to the waist, was shouting angrily, lashing the animals
-with his leather-thonged whip. It was a cruel sight and Leonardo turned
-away. From some experiments he had been making, Leonardo realized that
-the poor animals were struggling not only with the hill, but the drag of
-friction on the creaking axle. This drag could be eased, he thought to
-himself, by simply resting the axle in two sets of roller-bearings
-attached to the bottom of the cart near each wheel. In his mind he
-formed the plan for such a model as he made his way to the monastery.
-
-The drawing of the altarpiece was nearing completion. The monks were
-fascinated by the spectacle of the Adoration appearing before their
-eyes. The soft, umber outlines deepened with gray, the ochre
-highlighting the central figures charmed them and they sent another gift
-to Leonardo’s house—a cask of Tuscan red wine.
-
-
-As it turned out, Leonardo never finished this altarpiece. It is not
-known why. But the drawing for it can be seen today in the Uffizi
-Gallery in Florence just as Leonardo left it.
-
-It is certain, however, that Leonardo was far from idle during this
-time. He drew the design for eliminating the friction of a turning axle
-by mounting the axle in roller-bearings. He experimented with, and
-solved the problem of, transmitting motion to revolving machine parts by
-friction—the possible forerunner of our modern friction clutch. Another
-device, found in modern automobiles—the differential—was also drawn by
-Leonardo. This idea provided for the difference in speed between the two
-drive wheels when rounding a curve.
-
-Leonardo also drew the first known plans for a self-propelled vehicle—an
-“automobile.” It was designed to operate by a system of elastic springs
-wound by hand by the person on the vehicle; the “car” was then supposed
-to run the short distance allowed it by the unwinding of the springs.
-
-In addition, Leonardo continued designing machines for both offensive
-and defensive military action. One of these was a breech-loading cannon,
-together with the first known projectiles that took into consideration
-better penetration through the air and greater stability in their
-trajectory. Indeed, these very much resembled present-day aerial bombs,
-with pointed noses and stabilizing fins.
-
-As the months passed, however, Leonardo began to feel that his time and
-talents were being wasted in Florence. Although the monks and friends of
-the monastery were pleased with the work he was doing, other artists
-were being called to greater tasks in Rome. For example, Domenico di
-Tommaso del Ghirlandaio, Sandro Botticelli, and even Leonardo’s fellow
-student, Pietro Perugino, had left Florence to work in the chapel of
-Pope Sixtus IV in Rome—known to us as the Sistine Chapel. Now, too, it
-was becoming clear that Lorenzo and his court had no time for this
-solitary genius whose ideas stretched beyond his age.
-
-So Leonardo looked about him. He was thirty years old and the walls of
-Florence seemed to bind his spirit. To what city could he go where his
-talents would be put to fruitful use? Rome seemed to hold out no hope,
-for no one had offered him a position there.
-
-But Leonardo remembered that there had been a visitor to the Medicis
-from another city in recent months. This man was Ludovico Sforza, the
-ruling prince of Milan, the great city-state of the north. Ludovico, who
-was also called “Il Moro” (the Moor) because of his dark complexion, was
-seeking the friendship and alliance of the Medicis. He was fascinated
-with the art and culture of Florence and sought to gather to his own
-court of Milan as many artists, scientists, philosophers, and musicians
-as he could.
-
-Perhaps, thought Leonardo, his future lay in Milan. So he began
-collecting his countless drawings, diagrams of machines and instruments
-of war, his notes, his plans for canals and irrigation—even a drawing
-for a monument that he knew Ludovico wanted to erect to his father—and
-made a package of it to send to Ludovico. Then he sat down to write a
-letter to that nobleman. In it he set forth in ten numbered paragraphs
-his qualifications as military and naval engineer, architect, and
-hydraulics expert. Almost as an afterthought to the tenth item, he
-wrote: “I can carry out sculpture in marble, bronze, or clay, and also I
-can do in painting whatever may be done, as well as any other, be he who
-he may.”
-
-When he had finished the letter, Leonardo took out a strange instrument.
-It was a lyre of silver in the shape of a horse’s head. He had designed
-it himself, and now with an air of peace, he commenced to play. Its rich
-tone was sweet to hear and the music was his own composition.
-
-Leonardo had also designed other instruments—lyres, lutes, viols, and a
-kind of zither. He had perfected the single-stringed monochord of
-Pythagoras, replacing the tablet of wood with thin strips of drum that
-gave the instrument a low or high note according to the tightness of the
-string. In addition, he introduced stops or small pistons in the holes
-of wooden reed instruments; and, he had even invented a set of
-mechanical chords by using a wheel of reeds which plucked a set of
-strings as it was turned. His skill as a musician, composer, and singer
-was well known among his friends and his bass voice had retained the
-pureness of his boyhood.
-
-As it happened, news of Leonardo’s silver lyre had reached Lorenzo de’
-Medici. All Leonardo’s paintings, all his designs for cannons and
-fortifications, all his inventions for commercial machinery had failed
-to interest Lorenzo—yet this single musical oddity excited the ruler’s
-curiosity. Leonardo was summoned to the Medici palace.
-
-Lorenzo was enchanted both by the instrument and Leonardo’s musical
-talent. When Leonardo had finished playing, Lorenzo, surrounded by
-members of his court, applauded and said,
-
-“It would please us if Master Leonardo da Vinci would present us with
-this beautiful instrument so that we, in turn, could make a gift of it
-to His Highness, Ludovico Sforza, of Milan.”
-
-Leonardo bowed and replied,
-
-“Your Grace’s request is my pleasure. Moreover, Sire, it would further
-that pleasure to bear the gift myself to His Excellency in Milan.”
-
-The idea delighted Lorenzo. He immediately directed that Leonardo be
-given a letter to Ludovico and that every protection be given Leonardo
-for his journey.
-
-Leonardo, with the silver lyre and the letter of recommendation, hurried
-home to make his final preparations. He called on a friend and pupil,
-young Atalante Migliorotti, to accompany him.
-
-Toward the end of 1482 or the beginning of 1483, with the letter to
-Ludovico folded in a leather pouch, Leonardo and Atalante mounted their
-horses and left Florence for the long journey to Milan.
-
-
-
-
- 5
- _Milan_
-
-
-Milan at this time was one of the greatest and wealthiest city-states in
-all Europe. Its battlements and the spires of its mighty cathedral rose
-impressively from the lush plain of Lombardy. Towering over the city in
-the distance were the snow-capped peaks of the Alps. Groves of mulberry
-trees for the production of its famous silk industry and vast stretches
-of rice paddies extended far into the surrounding countryside.
-
-Leonardo and Atalante rode along the embankment of one of the many
-canals. The sight of the city hastened their pace although the journey
-had been a long one. Frequently on the trip Leonardo had stopped to make
-notes. Riding over the mountains and ravines surrounding Florence he had
-drawn some of the rushing streams and the stratifications of exposed
-cliffs. And when they had descended to the plains he observed the
-irrigation ditches and made notes on ways of improving the crude systems
-of dams and waterwheels.
-
-Leonardo was excited by this new city and by his prospects at the court
-of Ludovico. On the way to his lodgings, he also noticed that Milan was
-a great center of arms manufacture. Shop after shop displayed its wares
-of swords, spears, shields, armor for man and horse, and signs
-advertising foundries for the making of cannon. Perhaps here he might
-find an outlet for his military inventions.
-
-In the inn where he and Atalante stayed, Leonardo overheard the current
-political rumors. All around him was talk of the war. Girolamo Riario
-was again in the field, and Ludovico’s ally, Alfonso of Calabria, had
-just been defeated by the Venetians in a bloody battle at Campo Morto.
-
-Leonardo reread the letter he had written setting forth his own
-accomplishments and decided that now was the time to present himself as
-a military engineer. He would minimize the bronze monument, his music,
-and his painting, and instead, he would stress his skills in the
-inventions of war.
-
-When Leonardo appeared before Ludovico, he was a handsome young man of
-thirty-one. Tall and strong, he was dressed not according to fashion,
-but simply—almost severely. His hair hung in curls on his shoulders and
-his auburn mustache and neatly trimmed beard accented his ruddy
-complexion and deep-set blue eyes. Indeed, he presented a striking
-contrast to the nobleman seated before him. Il Moro, with his dark skin
-and straight black hair, his richly embroidered doublet with its broad
-sleeves and the heavy gold chains across his thick chest, was the exact
-opposite of Leonardo.
-
-Ludovico set aside Leonardo’s letter, rose from his chair, and walked to
-the heavy table on which Leonardo had spread out his drawings.
-
-Plans for all manner of war machines were there—those that Leonardo had
-designed for Lorenzo de’ Medici without success, together with many new
-additions. For example, there were plans for a self-propelled bomb with
-flames to be shot out in all directions—a bomb that was later to be
-called a “rotatory rocket” when it was actually invented in 1846.
-Leonardo also explained to Ludovico his idea for “poison gas” bombs
-containing sulfur: the fumes of these bombs would “produce stupor,” and
-they could be used both on land and sea, together with masks to protect
-those who were using them. Shrapnel shells, hand grenades, and javelins
-that burst into flame when they struck their objectives—these and many
-more were among his ideas.
-
-But perhaps the most unusual to Ludovico’s eyes was the design for an
-armored vehicle. It was shaped like a giant turtle, with overlapping
-sheets of reinforced wood so that enemy shells would bounce off its
-surface. The armor was pierced by loopholes for the breech-loading
-cannon and there was an opening at the top for ventilation. Power for
-the vehicle was supplied by eight men inside turning cranks which in
-turn were cogged to other wheels, setting in motion the four drive
-wheels. This of course was the forerunner of the tank and the armored
-car used in modern warfare.
-
- [Illustration: _Forerunner of the tank or armored car, as conceived
- by Leonardo. Motion was supposed to be supplied by four cogged
- wheels turned by manpower. Sheets of reinforced wood were supposed
- to serve as “armor” against enemy projectiles._]
-
-In addition, Leonardo laid before Ludovico all manner of cannons and
-designs for tunneling under the enemy’s defenses. Actually, with respect
-to warfare itself, Leonardo called it a most brutal “madness”; however,
-he recognized the necessity of being prepared. In his notebook, he
-wrote, “When besieged by ambitious tyrants I find a means of offense and
-defense in order to preserve the chief gift of nature, which is
-liberty.”
-
-Ludovico was very much interested in the things Leonardo had showed him.
-Although he was a man of limited imagination and was not able to grasp
-the scope of Leonardo’s proposals, he was nevertheless involved in a
-war. Since Ludovico’s aging military engineer was to be replaced,
-Leonardo left the forbidding castle of the Sforzas with high hopes of
-getting the position.
-
-In the meantime, he was commissioned to paint the portrait of a young
-girl from a noble family in Milan. At the same time, he began the bronze
-equestrian statue of Ludovico’s father, Francesco Sforza. For this work,
-he began an intensive study of horses. Since hunting was the popular
-sport at the court of the Sforzas, Ludovico owned a stable of the finest
-Arabian horses, and here Leonardo commenced his drawings. Again, his
-research for a work of art led him beyond just making preparatory
-sketches. His studies developed into notes, and his notes into a planned
-book on the anatomy of the horse.
-
-During these months of waiting for the appointment as military engineer,
-Leonardo furthered his experiments with cannon. In the course of these
-experiments, he came across a power that would later revolutionize all
-industry—steam. He devised—although he attributed the original idea to
-Archimedes—a water vessel connected to a copper tube which was heated by
-a fire. The water when flowing into the red-hot tube changed into steam
-and the pressure of the steam blew out a ball at the mouth of the tube
-with great force. Leonardo experimented with steam in other ways. He
-built an apparatus for measuring the transformation of water into vapor.
-It consisted of a metal box in which was a thin animal bladder partly
-filled with water. Resting on the top of the bladder was a flat lid
-attached by a cord hung from two pulleys to a counterweight on the
-outside. As the water was heated, the steam in the bladder pushed up the
-lid. As the lid rose both the volume and the pressure could be measured.
-There were distillation experiments with various condensers, one in
-particular that anticipated the modern condenser of Leibig, introducing
-double walls that formed a complete jacket for cooling with water in
-continual circulation.
-
-Not content with having an idle moment, Leonardo again turned to
-searching out books that he had not read and trying to fill the gaps in
-his education. He became especially interested in the German
-philosopher, Cardinal Cusanus. Cusanus, like himself, had been
-influenced by Toscanelli and was a man devoted to the natural sciences.
-Leonardo also studied the philosophy of Aristotle and the writings of
-St. Augustine. Throughout his life Leonardo believed in an active mind
-for, as “iron rusts from disuse, stagnant water loses its purity and in
-cold weather becomes frozen, even so does inaction sap the vigor of the
-mind.”
-
-Unfortunately, the post of military engineer went to a man named
-Ambrogio Ferrari. The extent and variety of Leonardo’s proposals were
-too great for Ludovico to trust. He did not believe that one man could
-possibly bring all those ideas into being. Ferrari, on the other hand,
-was a military engineer only, and a man who was content with the
-customary methods of warfare. Furthermore, Ludovico had at last decided
-that peaceful negotiations would gain him more than fighting. Thus
-Leonardo’s chance of recognition was again postponed.
-
-Meanwhile, the money that Leonardo had brought with him from Florence
-was almost gone. He had been forced to move from his apartment to a
-single room and now he was barely able to live from day to day. Although
-the court of Ludovico Sforza was one of the richest in the world,
-artists were frequently treated as servants; often they were the last to
-be paid for their services. Also, Leonardo was a foreigner in the city,
-which meant he was regarded with suspicion.
-
-Because of these reasons, Leonardo finally decided to do what the
-Milanese artists did—they banded together in groups sharing work and
-costs. Leonardo had met a young artist of twenty-eight, Giovanni
-Ambrogio de Predis, at the court of Ludovico. Ambrogio was court painter
-to the Sforza family and had achieved some success. Ambrogio recognized
-in the handsome stranger from Florence, however, the touch of genius,
-and he realized that his own talents would be furthered by learning from
-Leonardo. The two young men decided to pool their abilities. Ambrogio
-offered both lodging and a studio; and, in association with his two
-half-brothers, one a woodcarver, another a miniaturist, and his elder
-brother, a minter of coins, they would not lack for commissions.
-
-Commissions weren’t long in coming. On April 25, 1483, a contract was
-signed between Bartolommeo degli Scarlione, a prior of the Fraternity of
-the Immaculate Conception, and Ambrogio and Leonardo for an altarpiece.
-The fee was two hundred ducats, with a promise of more if it were
-delivered on time and was satisfactory to the Fraternity. Delivery date
-was to be December 8, 1484. Ambrogio was to paint the altar wings and
-Leonardo the center piece—a picture of the Blessed Virgin and Child.
-
-But when the painting was finished, it was not according to the
-instructions set forth in the contract. Leonardo had too independent a
-mind to be bound by conformity. Nor was it completed on time. Indeed,
-for twenty years the quarrel between the Fraternity and the painters
-went on. After ten years, Ludovico was asked to intervene for the money
-owed; after he failed, another ten years went by and the King of France
-himself was finally asked to settle the dispute. Leonardo wanted his one
-hundred ducats and the Fraternity offered twenty-five. Eventually, a
-secret agreement was arrived at and the painting was restored to
-Leonardo and Ambrogio. Leonardo’s painting, the masterpiece entitled the
-“Virgin of the Rocks,” now hangs in the museum of the Louvre in Paris.
-
-The day this contract was signed, Leonardo walked back through the city
-to Ambrogio’s studio near the Ticino gate. He was low in spirits from
-reading the petty instructions of the contract, and, in this mood, he
-became aware of the city streets and crowds about him. The noise, the
-confusion, the smells—yes, the smells were the worst. Garbage, filth,
-and dust were in heaps where the last rainwater had left them and they
-buzzed with flies.
-
-Moreover the houses were jammed together and shopkeepers crowded their
-wares to the edges of the streets, leaving just enough room for the
-occasional horseman to get through. Latrines were only for the better
-houses; here, the streets, alleys and even open doorways were toilets.
-People flung their scraps out of the window and at night in the poorly
-lit streets could be heard the scurrying of rats. Leonardo stopped,
-thinking half aloud:
-
-“Two levels. Streets running one above the other—one for pedestrians and
-one for carts and horses. Yes, and cutting through the whole city a
-system of canals to carry the city’s waste to a river or to the sea. Why
-not even ten cities of, say, five thousand houses in each—say, no more
-than thirty thousand people to a city?”
-
-Intent now on his thoughts he hurried to his home, his mind busy with
-his visions of new cities.
-
-
-During the years 1484 and 1485 the bubonic plague swept Italy—the same
-dreaded Black Death so prevalent in medieval times. Milan was one of the
-cities most severely stricken. Every courtyard became a hospital and the
-streets were deserted except for the rumbling carts picking up the dead.
-On the roads from the city were lines of refugees fleeing to the
-country. Surrounding cities that had not been infected manned their
-fortress walls as in wartime to keep the fleeing populations out.
-
-Ludovico at first tried to protect Milan from the spread of the disease;
-then, frightened, he and his court fled. Even the ruler’s official
-documents had to be “disinfected” by perfume and then held for a period
-of time before he would allow them near him.
-
-Leonardo, sensing opportunity, drew out his plans for his new cities.
-Canals running through them were to be used for barges and the
-underground conduits greatly resembled those of modern sewage systems.
-Paths were to have gutters for the adequate drainage of the streets.
-Public toilets were to be installed. Leonardo even had plans for the
-control of smoke collecting over the city—by sending it up tall chimneys
-where it was picked up by fans and driven away over the roofs. The
-widths of the streets were to be in proportion to the heights of the
-houses—light and air would circulate freely. Two levels would be
-connected by graceful ramps—the lower level for the commercial traffic
-and the upper level for the pedestrians. Where stairs were used they
-were designed so one could ascend or descend without one person seeing
-the other. Stables were devised so that animals were fed through
-openings in their mangers and under these were tunnels of flowing water
-for the removal of waste.
-
- [Illustration: _The results of the bubonic plague in Italy, 1484-85.
- Streets were deserted except for the carts picking up the dead._]
-
-These sweeping plans Leonardo laid before Ludovico when the epidemic had
-subsided. But Ludovico, once his fear was overcome, brushed them aside
-as impossible dreams.
-
-So Leonardo returned to the commission for the Fraternity and the
-designs for the bronze monument of Francesco Sforza. These jobs kept
-Leonardo from brooding about his rejections.
-
-Often, too, Leonardo worked with Bernardino de Predis, the elder brother
-of Ambrogio. Bernardino was a minter of coins. As Leonardo watched him
-at the laborious task of first cutting disks from ingots and then
-hammering the design into the hot metal, he suggested to Bernardino an
-easier method, then used in Germany. This was to prepare smooth ribbons
-of metal of the desired thickness and with a punch, impress the design
-into the ribbon at the necessary intervals and then, punch out the coin.
-Leonardo went on to improve this system by designing precise punches for
-both faces of the coin. A single machine then cut out and stamped the
-coins, using a falling weight raised by little winches. This machine was
-later destined for the Vatican mint in Rome.
-
-On March 26, 1485 an event occurred in Milan that was viewed with
-mingled fear, superstition, curiosity and excitement. There was a total
-eclipse of the sun. To some, coming as it did so soon after the plague,
-it was a judgment of God; to others, it was regarded as an omen—a sign
-for astrologers to use for predicting the future.
-
-But to Leonardo the eclipse was a moment of great scientific importance.
-At this time in history, the Ptolemaic, or geocentric theory of the
-universe was the popular belief. This theory taught that the earth is
-fixed and the sun and moon revolve around it. Leonardo himself had
-believed this theory for a long time. As he grew older, however, he read
-and heard discussions of the heliocentric theory. This theory proposed
-that the sun is fixed and the earth and stars move around it. Now, as he
-watched the eclipse, his doubts of the Ptolemaic concept were renewed
-and he resolved to make experiments of his own. The new theory was so
-daring for his times, however, that it would be many years before he
-became convinced of its truth.
-
-Later that night, deep in thought over the experience of the day, he
-noted down his observations of the eclipse and his doubts of the
-medieval concept of the heavens. The Church believed the earth was the
-fixed center of the universe. Scholars and scientists supported the
-belief of Aristotle in the four elements, earth, water, air, and
-fire—but something was wrong. What were the planets—what was the moon?
-He picked up his pen and on a clean sheet of paper he wrote, “Make
-glasses in order to see the moon large.”
-
-
-
-
- 6
- _The Monument_
-
-
-During this time, Leonardo had been struggling with the design for the
-bronze equestrian statue. Drawing after drawing lay scattered on his
-studio floor. Lately, however, a daring plan for this statue had come to
-him. It was to be a huge bronze warrior, Francesco Sforza, mounted on a
-rearing horse. Weighing perhaps a hundred thousand pounds, it was to be
-cast in sections in five furnaces—a fitting monument to the power of the
-Sforza family. But there still remained a big problem to be solved: how
-could he balance the plunging horse and man on just the two rear legs of
-the horse?
-
-Meanwhile, Leonardo had another problem to work on—a wooden model of the
-Milan cathedral. He had entered his name with the cathedral authorities
-as a competitor in the design and construction of the cathedral’s dome.
-Many architects had been brought in and had failed, partly because of
-the antagonism of the Milanese workmen to foreign craftsmen, and partly
-because the committee found it difficult to decide what designs it
-liked. Leonardo had sent them a letter outlining his own recommendations
-and had drawn many pages of possible plans. He put forward his knowledge
-of various building materials, his understanding of classical
-architecture, and his wish to keep his own ideas in harmony with the
-Gothic tradition of the cathedral itself. Often he would make a point of
-walking about the city, observing the different constructions under way
-and drawing up plans to shorten the labor by mechanical means.
-
-In July of 1487 Leonardo received a payment from the cathedral
-authorities for the wooden model he had submitted. Still, however, no
-final decision had been reached. Now, as Leonardo looked at the model in
-his studio, he felt the urge to improve it further—to make it more
-perfect. Yet he held his impatience in check and decided he would wait a
-little longer. Instead, he decided to work on some of his ideas for
-construction devices. He had already made many drawings, but they could
-be improved, he thought, and he began to make calculations.
-
-Among these notes and drawings was an improvement on a device for the
-raising of columns. It was a mobile windlass with a transmission gear
-for transporting and erecting columns and obelisks. Another device was
-an earth drill resembling a modern corkscrew with double handle bars.
-The upper bar, when turned, drilled the screw into the earth while the
-lower bar—when turned the opposite way—carried the dirt up and out. Also
-there was a double crane mounted on a circular trolley which carried the
-dirt of excavation up and then the crane was moved around on its trolley
-so the dirt could be unloaded in different directions.
-
-Other labor-saving devices that Leonardo designed were an automatic pile
-driver, the weight of which was raised by a winch and tripped
-automatically at its height to fall on the piling; a lift for raising
-iron bells to bell towers; and a machine for boring tree trunks to make
-pipes for carrying water.
-
-In the fall of 1488, Leonardo was interrupted by a summons from
-Ludovico, who wanted him to design and build the decorations for the
-forthcoming marriage of his nephew, young Duke Gian Galeazzo Sforza, to
-Isabella of Aragon, granddaughter of the King of Naples. He worked on
-this steadily until the wedding ceremony in February of the following
-year. When the day arrived, the street from the cathedral to the grim
-castle was trimmed with flags and banners of the two royal houses. The
-inner courtyards of the castle were transformed into delicate arbors of
-laurel boughs. Yet it was the evening’s reception and entertainment
-which were to be the climax and to them Leonardo had brought all his
-mechanical skill. However, the announcement of the death of the bride’s
-mother cut short the celebration and, after the bride and groom had left
-for Pavia, the wedding party soon dispersed. Disappointed that his
-decorations had not been fully appreciated, Leonardo returned to his
-studio and the problem of the monument.
-
-He was still struggling with the problem of balancing the rearing horse.
-And, indeed, a solution was soon found. By placing a fallen soldier with
-his arm upraised in protection under the forefeet of the horse, Leonardo
-could balance the enormous weight and provide for the proper casting of
-the molten bronze.
-
-Finally, Leonardo made a small wax model of the proposed statue and
-showed it to Ludovico. The nobleman was impressed by its originality.
-Most of the ideas contributed by other sculptors were mere variations of
-what had already been done many times. Also, the other plans called for
-bronze of not more than two thousand pounds, while Leonardo envisioned a
-statue fifty times that size! Ludovico awarded the commission to
-Leonardo.
-
-Leonardo was to work on this commission for ten years and it was
-destined never to be immortalized in bronze, for reasons that will be
-explained later. His energies, as usual, were poured into many schemes.
-Growing out of his work on the monument he planned one book on the
-subject of casting in bronze and another on the anatomy of the horse.
-But the one subject, which he began to study in this period and which
-would occupy the remainder of his life, was the study of human anatomy.
-So Leonardo, in the midst of all his other activities, wrote in his
-notes, “On the second day of April 1489 the book entitled _Of the Human
-Figure_.”
-
-The sources of anatomical study up to Leonardo’s day had been the
-Greeks—Hippocrates and Galen—and the Arab—Avicenna. Books on this
-subject were few, and the anatomical diagrams were crude and inaccurate.
-Galen, for example, had based his studies on the dissection of monkeys.
-Renaissance anatomists had explained his errors by pointing out that man
-had probably changed since Galen’s time. The Church had stepped in
-during the fourteenth century with an edict that was interpreted as a
-prohibition against dissection of the human body. In Italy, however,
-there were some dissections. They could only use, for this purpose, the
-bodies of criminals, slaves, and people of foreign birth. In Florence,
-anatomy was studied by the artists, and Leonardo had undoubtedly watched
-Pollaiuolo at work on a corpse that that artist had dissected.
-
-In 1489 Leonardo, from the results of his own investigation, produced
-drawings of the skull and backbone whose careful attention to detail
-are—even today—classics in art and anatomy. With infinite patience and
-with a saw of his own invention he had halved a skull and drew for the
-first time with accuracy the curves of the frontal and sphenoid bones.
-He drew the lachrymal (tear) canal, and he was the first to show the
-cavity in the superior maxillary bone—not discovered again until 1651,
-by Highmore—now named “the antrum of Highmore.” He was the first to
-demonstrate the double curvature of the spine and its accompanying
-vertebrae, the inclination of the sacrum, the shape of the rib cage, and
-the true position of the pelvis. He planned a whole series of books that
-would include from head to foot and from inside to outside every section
-of the human apparatus.
-
-Meanwhile he had been working on the monument, redesigning it to conform
-to the practical needs of casting. Now it had reached an even grander
-scale—a colossus that would require two hundred thousand pounds of
-bronze! He recorded in his notes the very day that this work was
-started, “On the twenty-third day of April 1490 I commenced this book
-and recommenced the horse.” The “horse,” of course, was the monument and
-“this book” referred to still another subject which had grown out of his
-studies of anatomy and perspective.
-
-The title of the proposed book was to be _Light and Shade_. It would
-include the subject of optics or the mechanism of the eye, the problems
-of reflection and refraction and it would lead him eventually to a
-re-examination of his studies of the sun and moon.
-
-In Leonardo’s day, and even for a long while afterwards, the popular
-belief of vision was one that had originally been put forth by the
-Platonic school and expanded by Euclid and Ptolemy. This belief was that
-the eye sent forth rays that brought back the image to the soul.
-Leonardo, in his younger days, had believed in the same theory. Not
-content with what had been written on the subject, however, he began to
-experiment for himself.
-
-These experiments led him to an examination of the eye itself. He noted
-the various parts of the eye—the optic foramen or opening, the pigment
-layer, and the iris. These were already known by the Arabs. Leonardo
-discovered, however, the crystalline area of the eye. He explained
-binocular vision, or three-dimensional images, by correctly noting the
-positions of the two eyes in the head. He described the variations in
-the diameter of the pupil according to the surrounding light. Further
-experiments with light brought him to the conclusion that light and
-images are received by the eye. He took a piece of paper, for example,
-and pierced it with a small hole. With this he looked at the source of
-light. He noted the cone shape of the rays funneling into the tiny hole
-and then when the paper was held next to a white wall he noted that the
-rays spread out again. He established that light travels in straight
-lines. He constructed the first “camera obscura”—a box with a small hole
-in it. Inside the box an object was placed near the hole and behind that
-a lighted candle. When the box was closed the image of the object was
-cast on the wall. Leonardo was already acquainted with lenses, and he
-placed a magnifying lens over the hole to create an enlarged image.
-
- [Illustration: _Leonardo’s “camera obscura” which he used for
- projecting an image of an object on a wall or screen._]
-
-He also demonstrated various laws relative to optical illusion, such as
-irradiation—when a metal rod is made red-hot at one end, that end seems
-thicker than the other. A brightly lit object seems larger than one
-exactly like it that is dimly lit; a dark object placed against a light
-background seems smaller than it is; a light object seems larger than
-its real size when placed against a dark background; and the illusion of
-a light swung in a circle appears as a complete circle of light.
-
-Many years before Newton, Leonardo described the experiment of breaking
-up a ray of white light into the solar spectrum. Also he compared two
-sources of light and measured their intensity by the depth of their
-shadows accompanied by a drawing that was the forerunner of Rumford’s
-photometer three centuries later! He stated the law of reflection—that
-is, that the angle of reflection is always equal to the angle of
-incidence.
-
-
-About this time Leonardo left the studio of Ambrogio de Predis and moved
-into the Sforza Castle. Ludovico had put at his disposal a studio in the
-Corte Vecchia and the use of a room in one of the towers—which Leonardo
-always kept locked. To his growing list of work, Leonardo now had to add
-the preparations for the delayed wedding reception of Ludovico’s nephew,
-Gian Galeazzo Sforza.
-
-On a cold winter evening of January 1490 the guests assembled again.
-Silks, satins and gold brocade, diamonds, rubies and pearls glittered in
-the brilliant lights. Princes of the Church mingled with ambassadors of
-foreign lands. Music and perfume filled the air and as the party quieted
-down the entertainment began. There were dances in gay costumes. Poetry
-was recited that flattered the bride and groom. There were allegorical
-processions. The jokes and antics of the court jester made the audience
-laugh.
-
-Then, at midnight, the curtain that hung from wall to wall at the end of
-the ballroom was raised. Applause and cries of delight greeted the
-spectacle. The rising curtain revealed a room in which there was a
-hemisphere surrounded by the signs of the zodiac and the planets. While
-the planets in their niches flickered with concealed lights and the
-signs of the zodiac glowed, lines were spoken in honor of the house of
-Sforza to the accompaniment of a choir. The ancient gods swept down from
-the heavens, and the Virtues and Graces moved across the scene with
-nymphs waving lanterns. The music drowned out the sound of the
-mechanism. This was the kind of mechanics that Ludovico could understand
-and appreciate.
-
-The success of this entertainment so pleased Ludovico that Leonardo was
-encouraged to present another amusing idea. This one was an “alarm
-clock” and it utilized what we call today the mechanical relay
-principle. When a small power is suddenly switched over, the power is
-reinforced. The “alarm” clock worked by placing a shallow basin of water
-at one end of a tubed lever. At the other end was another empty basin.
-Water was led drop by drop into the second basin and as this slowly
-filled the increasing weight lowered the lever. The shallow basin of
-water at the first end was suddenly emptied and the immediate switch in
-weight flipped the lever up and this in turn pushed up the sleeper’s
-feet.
-
-
-Leonardo decided to withdraw from the competition for the cathedral
-dome. Although the cathedral authorities were pleased with his design,
-they could not decide to whom the commission should be awarded. In the
-summer of 1490 Ludovico was called upon to settle the issue and he
-decided in favor of Antonio Amadeo from Milan. But the work that
-Leonardo had done so impressed Ludovico that he sent him to Pavia in
-company with an architect from Siena, Francesco di Giorgio Martini, to
-inspect the work on the cathedral of that city. Leonardo, who had his
-own workshop and apprentices now, took along one of them, Marco
-d’Oggionno, a young boy of twenty.
-
-In Pavia one of the greatest libraries in all of Italy was in the ducal
-palace. Here Leonardo wandered among shelves of books and illuminated
-manuscripts bound in rich velvets and gold-embossed leather all bound to
-their places with silver chains. One book that he records in his notes
-was written in the thirteenth century by Witelo, a Polish scholar, who
-wrote extensively on perspective. Leonardo, by the necessity of his art,
-had solved many problems in perspective. He had invented a pair of
-proportional compasses, the forerunners of those used today for the
-transfer of a drawing from one scale to duplicate the same drawing in a
-larger scale. Leonardo had also designed in very careful detail a
-parabolic compass for drawing a parabola in one continuous movement. He
-now determined to write his own book on perspective and, as the subject
-was so close to his studies of the eye, he would entitle it
-_Introduction to Perspective, or the Function of the Eye_.
-
-Leonardo submitted a number of plans for the completion of the cathedral
-to the authorities in Pavia and then returned to Milan. He worked
-through the rest of the summer on the equestrian statue and at the same
-time he continued to expand his notes on anatomy, light and shade, and
-perspective.
-
-Late on a cold December night in 1490, Leonardo lit his lamp. This was a
-very special lamp that he had invented. It had already created a great
-deal of comment. It was so unusual, he had received an order from the
-court for another which he made with a richly carved pedestal. Candles,
-torches, and oil lamps, the only methods of artificial illumination in
-those days, were poor substitutes for light. They flickered, smoked,
-went out, and frequently caused damage with their hot drippings. As a
-side result of his experiments in light, Leonardo had put a glass
-cylinder in the middle of a larger glass globe. A wick in olive oil was
-placed in the cylinder and the outside globe was then filled with water.
-The result was a bright, steady light magnified by the water in the
-globe.
-
-He sat down by the small fire and arranged his papers in front of him.
-Then, with a glance at his lamp, he picked up his goose-quill pen and
-wrote, “No substance can be comprehended without light and shade; light
-and shade are caused by light.”
-
-
-
-
- 7
- _Success_
-
-
-It was January of 1491, and a light snow had fallen in Milan, edging
-with white all the roofs, the massive spires of the cathedral and the
-red battlements of the Sforza castle. Soon Ludovico was to be married to
-Beatrice d’Este of the ducal house of Ferrara.
-
-Once more the streets of Milan echoed to the carpenters’ hammers.
-Messengers rode to and from the castle and endless carts full of
-provisions pushed through the crowded city. Guests began to arrive from
-all the allied courts of Italy with their bodyguards and servants. The
-rooms of the castle, the palaces of the nobles, and even the inns were
-filling with the royal processions.
-
-Leonardo was again summoned by the court to prepare the decorations, the
-costumes for the masquerades, and the arena for the jousting
-tournaments. An invitation had been sent to all the friendly courts to
-attend these contests-at-arms. So, accompanying each new party’s arrival
-was a band of armored knights, their breast-plates, helmets, and shields
-glistening in the winter sun.
-
-Leonardo enjoyed designing mechanical toys and entertaining the guests
-with them. One of these was a mechanical drum. Ordinarily most of the
-entertainment began with normal drum rolls, but Leonardo’s rolls were
-made on a kind of wheelbarrow. On it was mounted an enormous drum. When
-the “wheelbarrow” was pushed, it put into motion a cogged wheel geared
-to the axle. This wheel in turn was geared to two rotary cylinders with
-pegs mounted around the top. The pegs moved against five drumsticks on
-either side of the drum and thumped out a rhythm according to the
-position of the pegs.
-
-Ludovico’s marriage to Beatrice d’Este, a girl of little more than
-fifteen years, further isolated Leonardo from the court. Being almost a
-child, Beatrice loved parties and festivities, and she surrounded
-herself with people who catered to her frivolous whims. As a result so
-serious a man as Leonardo was forced into the background of the court
-life. He was called upon more and more to act as stage-designer while
-his more important work went unnoticed. Because these entertainments
-were easy for Leonardo to design, they did give him more time to work on
-his giant equestrian monument of Francesco Sforza. Working one day on
-the scaffolding surrounding the clay figure of his statue, Leonardo
-heard a knock at his studio door.
-
-“Come in,” he shouted as he climbed down. “The door’s open.”
-
-Three peasants cautiously entered the room and quickly took off their
-caps. One of them was holding a carefully wrapped bundle.
-
-“Master Leonardo, we have brought you some shells we found on a ridge of
-Monferrato. Remember, you asked us to bring anything we found that was
-unusual?”
-
-“Yes, Pietro. Thank you. Put them here on the table.”
-
-Leonardo opened the bundle. He smiled when he saw the shells. He
-remembered how, as a young boy, he had found seashells like these high
-in the mountains. Leonardo questioned Pietro and his companions as to
-where they had been found and under what circumstances. He gave them
-some coins and, when they had gone, he looked among his growing
-collection of notes and drawings on the shelves. It took some time for
-him to find what he wanted, for the pages were in such confusion.
-Finally, he sat down at the table with several of the sheets and,
-putting the seashells in front of him, he began to make notes.
-
-The shells were fossil shells but, thought Leonardo, their presence on
-the high mountains of Lombardy could hardly be attributed to the great
-flood as described in the Bible. In his notes, Leonardo cited the case
-of the cockle which, out of water, is like the snail. It makes a furrow
-in the sand and can travel in this furrow about three to four yards a
-day. By such means, he calculated, it could not possibly have reached
-Monferrato from the Adriatic in forty days (which was supposed to have
-been the duration of the flood)—a distance of 250 miles. Nor were these
-simply dead shells deposited by the waves—for the living creatures are
-recognized by being in pairs, and these in front of him had certainly
-been traveling in pairs. Consequently, they could have been left there
-only when they were alive and the mountains were covered by the primeval
-oceans. Moreover, Leonardo also described how living matter in
-prehistoric times fell into the mud and died, and how this mud, as the
-waters receded and years had passed, was changed into rock forming a
-mold about the fossil—literally making a cast of its original living
-appearance.
-
-By such deductive reasoning and the testing of the evidence before him
-against the common beliefs, Leonardo struggled to free the minds of men
-from medieval superstitions and beliefs. Indeed, these medieval
-superstitions existed everywhere. Astrologers, or men who told fortunes
-by the position of the stars at a given moment; and necromancers, those
-who by tricks of magic claimed to be able to talk to departed
-spirits—these men profited from the ignorant. The Church, with its
-preaching of devils and hells, provided the background against which
-these fakers flourished.
-
-Ludovico Sforza was himself a believer in such things. His own physician
-and astrologer was a man by the name of Ambrogio da Rosate, who had such
-influence over the court that he was given a post in the University of
-Pavia, and his fame was so great that he was called upon to predict the
-future of Pope Innocent VIII! Leonardo’s dislike of these men was
-intense. He scorned the supernatural and asked men to look about them at
-the real world and the real heavens. Observation and experiment—these
-were Leonardo’s key words. But he was a lonely figure in his
-thinking—like a man awake while the rest of the world slept.
-
-At last the full-size model of the Sforza monument was nearing
-completion. Ludovico had ordered it ready for exhibition in the
-courtyard of the castle for yet another marriage festival that was soon
-to take place. This time it was the marriage of his niece Bianca Maria
-to Maximilian I of Germany. Leonardo and his assistants were busy with
-the finishing touches on the monument, and with building a wagon on
-which to carry it from the studio to the courtyard.
-
-During these last months Leonardo had had to struggle with all kinds of
-heavy loads. Already he had improved on pulleys by inventing a new kind
-of tackle, and he also had utilized many kinds of levers. One of his
-simpler discoveries for raising heavy weights was a jack which, in
-appearance and principle, was the forerunner of our own automobile jack.
-
-In 1493 when the clay model of the Sforza monument was completed, it was
-put on the cart and wheeled to its place of exhibition where a curtain
-was thrown around it. Again Milan was the host to a gathering of noble
-courts, and this time Ludovico outdid himself in the display of luxury.
-Tapestries hung from the buildings and rich carpets were laid down the
-steps of the cathedral. Everything that Milan had to show was on
-exhibition—even a crocodile.
-
-But the most impressive sight of all was the unveiling of Leonardo’s
-colossal statue. It rose in majesty against the red walls of the castle.
-The name of Leonardo da Vinci was suddenly on everyone’s lips. As the
-word of his artistic achievement spread from city to city, messages of
-praise came pouring in. And, for a while the years of frustration and
-failure to gain recognition melted away. Leonardo at forty-one had at
-last achieved some success.
-
-Now there was a breathing spell, and Leonardo returned to some of his
-own projects. For a long time he had continued his observations of his
-two favorite elements—air and water. To him they were related in their
-movements. The birds flying in the currents of air and the fish swimming
-in the flow of water seemed very similar to him. He had already designed
-various instruments to tell him about the direction of wind and its
-velocity, and he had also commenced to analyze the wing structure of
-birds and bats. To soar through the air like a bird was an ancient dream
-of man, yet for Leonardo it had become a passion. Ceaselessly, he
-sketched the flights of birds, the flutterings of butterflies and
-analyzed their flying patterns.
-
-But to Leonardo, understanding the _dynamics_, or motion, of air was the
-most important thing. He built an _anemoscope_, an instrument like a
-weather-vane for telling the direction of the wind; and, he also
-constructed several types of _anemometers_ for measuring the velocity or
-force of the wind. One of these latter consisted of a thin rectangle of
-metal hanging straight down in front of an upward-curving wooden arc.
-This arc was marked off in units of measurement. When the wind blew, it
-pushed the thin rectangle up the arc; thus, by noting at which gradation
-it stopped, Leonardo could tell the velocity.
-
-In addition, Leonardo at this time constructed a device which has been
-compared to the modern instrument used for testing the weight-carrying
-capacity of airplane wings. He fashioned a wing resembling a bird’s wing
-and attached it to a lever so that it would be possible to lower the
-wing by pushing rapidly down on the lever. This wing in turn was mounted
-on a plank that was in weight equal to that of a human being. He then
-calculated that two wings of this kind would have to be about twelve
-meters wide and twelve meters long to raise a man and his machine
-together. Another device resembling those found in airplanes today that
-Leonardo constructed was an inclination gauge. He made this by
-suspending a heavy ball on a cord within a glass bell. This ball was
-then supposed to guide the flyer by telling him whether he was flying
-level, diagonally, up, or down.
-
- [Illustration: _One of Leonardo’s anemometers. The wind blew against
- the strip of metal, pushing it up the curved gauge and thereby
- measuring the force of the wind._]
-
- [Illustration: _Leonardo’s inclination gauge, designed to guide a
- man in flight. The ball in the glass cylinder was supposed to tell a
- “flyer” whether or not he was flying level or tipped._]
-
-To Leonardo, water was also a phenomenon that from his youth never
-failed to excite his curiosity. The use of water power to run machines,
-to irrigate fields and to carry boats inland was a subject that he never
-ceased investigating. Out of his experiments at this time he constructed
-a device for raising water to high levels. It was based on the geometric
-spiral of Archimedes. He took a piece of gut, inflated it, and let it
-dry. Then, covering it with a coat of wax to make it waterproof, he
-wound it around a thin staff in a spiral. He put one end in a stream and
-attached it by gears to a cogged water wheel; this set the long screw to
-turning, and he was able to raise water from a low level to any height
-he desired. With a multiple system of these screws he could raise water
-in continuous circulation to the reservoirs on the highest towers.
-
-
-In the year 1494, King Charles VIII of France crossed the Alps at the
-head of an army of twenty-five thousand men. Now Ludovico, by a series
-of diplomatic maneuvers, had allied himself with Charles and had, by
-secret negotiation, actually invited the invasion. By such an alliance
-he hoped to use Charles’ army to overcome the forces of the Pope which
-stood in the path of Ludovico’s ambition to become the most powerful
-ruler in Italy. Outwardly Charles was asserting his rights to the
-Kingdom of Naples, but inwardly he dreamt of leading a crusade against
-the infidels in the Holy Land. At the same time young Gian Galeazzo
-Sforza, Duke of Milan, was dying. Ludovico desired this title for
-himself; however, until Galeazzo was out of the way, he could not have
-it. There were ugly rumors that young Sforza had been poisoned.
-Moreover, in 1494, the Medicis—another powerful obstacle—were expelled
-from Florence, and a republic was established.
-
-Soon young Gian Galeazzo died, leaving a son, Francesco. This son was
-the rightful heir to the Dukedom of Milan but Ludovico usurped the boy’s
-claim and declared himself Duke of Milan. Now Ludovico was in a position
-to await the impending battle between Charles and the Pope.
-
-With such military and political ambitions in mind, Duke Ludovico now
-assigned Leonardo the task of reviewing Milan’s defenses. Again Leonardo
-submitted to Ludovico his plans for strengthening fortresses and designs
-for new ones. The great architect Bramante was also assigned the task of
-seeing to the city’s defenses, and for some time the two brilliant men
-worked together.
-
-Then, in the spring of 1494, Leonardo was sent to Vigevano where
-Ludovico’s young wife was staying. This town was also the birthplace of
-Ludovico, and Leonardo was given the job of designing and building a
-small summer house and garden there for Beatrice. In addition, Leonardo
-built a kind of “air conditioner” for her bedroom. It consisted of a
-large waterwheel that cooled the air circulated into her room. Although
-this ancient device had long been known to the Greeks and Romans,
-Leonardo was the one who succeeded in perfecting it.
-
-During this time Leonardo’s highly original mind was also at work on
-other devices. One of these was an _odometer_, an instrument for
-measuring the distance traversed by a vehicle. Dials, turned by a system
-of gears attached to the wheel of a wheelbarrow, measured the distance
-traveled as the barrow was pushed along the ground. In addition,
-Leonardo conceived a kind of odometer to be used at sea; this consisted
-essentially of a spinner that was towed by a ship which registered its
-speed. Leonardo even invented an automatic spit operated by metal vanes
-mounted in the chimney that revolved with the pressure of the hot air
-rising from the fire—and a pair of large floating shoes for walking on
-water!
-
-In the meantime, Charles VIII of France had marched through Rome and
-entered Naples. The conquest was without opposition. Charles was then
-crowned King of Naples and all Italy was at his feet. Yet his triumph
-was a short one. Ludovico, having used the king to get rid of his
-enemies, now plotted against the king himself. He formed an alliance
-with the Pope, Venice, Spain, and the German emperor. Charles, faced
-with this league, hastily beat a retreat to France. Fighting his way to
-the border, he there signed a peace treaty. Thus Ludovico had swept
-Italy clean of all opposition and was now the most powerful prince in
-the land.
-
-Yet Ludovico was quick to realize that his position could only be held
-by force and he set about strengthening himself and his allies. To
-provide for more cannons, a hundred and fifty thousand tons of bronze
-were sent to manufacturing works in Ferrara. This, however, included the
-very bronze Leonardo needed for the casting of his equestrian statue,
-and this is why the statue was never cast. Years of Leonardo’s work now
-seemed to vanish overnight. Ludovico also needed large sums of money to
-secure friends in high places and Leonardo’s own payments were suddenly
-dropped. Forced again to worry about paying for his daily bread and for
-his household and apprentices, he wrote letters to Ludovico complaining
-of his lack of funds and asking for money that was owed him for work
-done. He looked about for other commissions, but none were available.
-Moreover, because he was still court painter to Ludovico, he was ordered
-to paint the decorations of some rooms in the castle. But this was more
-than Leonardo could take—he walked off the job without finishing it.
-
-Despite all of these misfortunes, Leonardo continued struggling with the
-problems of flight. He kept working out the proportions of wing span to
-the weight of the load. Indeed, he had already started designs for a
-flying machine. He had chosen a room which was the highest in one of the
-towers of the castle and which had access to a roof. Leonardo’s plans
-for a flying machine were a secret, and, with the exception of an
-assistant, no one knew about them. He made sure that he could not be
-seen by the workmen on the dome of the cathedral and proceeded to block
-off his room with beams which he planned to use as supports for his
-model.
-
-He had thought at first that any attempted flight should take place over
-water in order to cushion a possible crash—but as his plans progressed
-he designed a parachute. It was a pyramid-shaped “tent of linen”
-twenty-four feet broad and twenty-four feet high, and it is believed to
-have been successfully tried out from a tower especially constructed for
-that purpose.
-
-Since Leonardo was no longer working for Ludovico, he lived more simply
-than ever. He made regular lists of his expenses down to the last penny.
-His habits were frugal although he always kept himself neat. His meals
-were spare; he drank a little wine at meals and never ate meat. To his
-pupils and apprentices, he recommended regular habits such as not
-sleeping during midday, eating only when hungry and chewing well,
-exercising moderately, and sleeping well covered.
-
-Yet, even though Leonardo lived cheaply, he was now greatly in need of
-money. Swallowing his pride, he wrote to Ludovico, placing himself at
-the duke’s service once again. His absence from court, he said, had been
-necessary so that he could earn a living. In this and other ways,
-Leonardo attempted to heal the break between them.
-
-It turned out that Ludovico was glad to have Leonardo back. Perhaps
-mindful of the fame that the model of the equestrian monument had
-brought the house of Sforza, he now commissioned Leonardo to paint a
-picture. The Dominican monastery of Santa Maria delle Grazie was the
-nearest church to the Sforza castle and a favorite retreat of Ludovico.
-Here he used to walk in the quiet garden while the white-robed monks
-silently went about their chores. In gratitude for the peace he found
-there, Ludovico had had the refectory rebuilt and on the back wall, a
-crucifixion scene had been painted by Montorfano, a Lombard. But the
-front wall was given to Leonardo. On this Leonardo decided to paint a
-picture of the Last Supper—the painting that has since become one of the
-best known in the world.
-
-
-
-
- 8
- _The French_
-
-
-The noonday sun was baking the deserted streets of Milan as Leonardo
-hurried across the drawbridge of the castle. The guard dozing in the
-entrance arch started to his feet, but when he saw who it was he sat
-down again, muttering about a madman. Taking the shortest way, Leonardo
-arrived at the monastery gate and pulled on the bellcord. When the gate
-opened Leonardo brushed past the startled monk and made directly for the
-scaffolding in the refectory. He looked at his almost completed painting
-for a moment, took a brush and mixed a color swiftly on the large
-palette. Then he climbed the scaffolding and very quickly applied three
-or four strokes. With this he sighed and smiled. Then, just as abruptly,
-he put away his brushes and, without a backward glance, he left, making
-his way back to the castle in the hot sun.
-
-For three years, Leonardo had been working this way on the “Last
-Supper.”
-
-Sometimes he would work from dawn to dusk forgetting to eat; other
-times, he would stay away for days and then run back just to add a
-touch. Once he arrived and, with his arms folded across his chest, he
-stood in front of it for two hours just studying what he had done.
-
-Now, in 1498, the painting was nearing completion and the only faces
-still left blank were those of Christ and Judas. Leonardo had drawn
-hundreds of sketches, taking his models wherever he found them—once he
-sketched a man just for his hands. Now that his name had become well
-known he always had an audience while he worked. His pupils, the monks,
-visiting nobility, church officials, and frequently Ludovico himself
-watched him as he painted the “Last Supper.”
-
-But Leonardo, as usual, was involved in many different tasks. He was
-supervising the installation of a hydraulic pump over seventy feet high
-beside a stream which would use the power of the stream itself to pump
-water into the castle. Mindful, too, of the uncertainty of court
-patronage, he was designing commercial machinery, hoping thereby to
-secure an income outside the court. Among the most notable of these were
-an olive press, an automatic file-cutter, a hydraulic saw, and a needle
-sharpener. This latter was a forerunner of modern sharpeners with their
-mass-production methods. With it, Leonardo dreamt of sharpening four
-hundred needles at a time, or forty thousand an hour so that in twelve
-hours one person could sharpen four hundred and eighty thousand needles!
-The needles were arranged successively on a moving belt of leather and
-brought against a rotating grindstone. This grindstone was set in such a
-way that the needles were sharpened into curvilinear points rather than
-the usual triangular points.
-
-In his travels to Vigevano and other parts of the countryside around
-Milan, Leonardo had studied flour mills. He had talked with the workmen,
-asked the prices of grain, and noted the time that it took to do the
-milling. Then he made calculations on ways to cut down the time, and, in
-fact, redesigned the entire mill. He mounted twelve cylindrical
-millstones in rows of four on one side of a canal and another twelve on
-the other side. In the canal were hydraulic wheels or paddlewheels. Each
-wheel was attached to a rod that ran underneath four millstones. Geared
-to the one rod were four grinding levers to the stones above. In this
-way it was possible to have twenty-four millstones operating at the same
-time.
-
-But most fascinating to Leonardo now was the construction of his flying
-machine. His first models involved the principle of an air-screw mounted
-on a platform on which a man stood. But where would the necessary power
-come from to lift his machine from the ground? At first he thought of
-operating his air-screw by means of a steel spring coiled around a drum,
-but this he apparently abandoned. Later, however, Leonardo did design
-another model on this principle which has been called the forerunner of
-the modern helicopter. It was to be operated by four men standing on a
-platform. Each man would hold a bar which wound a spring-driven
-mechanism, much as in a modern clockworks. The air-screw was a broad
-blade spiraling about a vertical shaft—the ancestor of the modern
-propeller.
-
-The model that Leonardo wanted to construct now, however, was of a
-different principle. Instead of an air-screw he substituted a pair of
-wings fashioned after those of the birds. There was still a platform on
-which the flyer stood and two springs were still the essential “motor”
-to raise and lower the wings. But as Leonardo worked on his apparatus he
-began to realize that it would be too much at the mercy of a sudden gust
-of wind or a violent updraft. It was necessary to return to his study of
-the air and its currents.
-
-With all of this activity in mechanical devices Leonardo had reawakened
-his interest in mathematics. During this time he was introduced to a man
-at Ludovico’s court who became his friend and collaborator. He was a
-Franciscan monk named Fra Luca Pacioli who had been appointed a
-professor of mathematics by Ludovico. He, too, came from Florence, and
-in 1496, when he met Leonardo, he was forty-six years old and the author
-of _Summa di Arithmetica_, the first printed scientific work of his
-time. Pacioli was now at work on a book of geometry to be entitled _De
-Divina Proportione_ and he enlisted Leonardo’s aid in drawing the plates
-for his book. As Leonardo had already made a study of human proportions,
-the association with Pacioli was of benefit to them both. Among
-Leonardo’s best known drawings of human proportion is a beautifully
-rendered figure-study of a standing man with his arms at his sides and
-then outstretched, his legs together and then apart, inscribed within a
-square and a circle. It was made to illustrate a passage from Vitruvius
-on the proportions of a human figure and demonstrated, among other
-things, “the span of a man’s outstretched arms is equal to his height.”
-
-Moreover, Leonardo found with Pacioli confirmation of many of his own
-observations and experiments and in turn Pacioli gave to Leonardo a
-confidence in his own methods. Pacioli also helped Leonardo with his
-arithmetic, a subject that Leonardo had neglected in his impatience to
-study geometry. The association also helped to free him further from the
-cobwebs of medieval beliefs. For Pacioli, the friendship with Leonardo
-was a revelation. Although Pacioli was a learned mathematician, Leonardo
-demonstrated to him that the application of his science encompassed
-_all_ sciences—even art—for Leonardo later wrote, “Let no one read me
-who is not a mathematician....”
-
-Legend relates that Leonardo became so absorbed in his studies that the
-prior of the monastery complained to Ludovico that the “Last Supper,”
-although nearly completed, still lacked the faces of Christ and Judas.
-Ludovico summoned Leonardo to court and laid the complaint before him.
-Leonardo, however, was quick to reply.
-
-“The good prior is an esteemed man, your Grace, but he is a monk and not
-a painter. Little does he know that I spend at least two hours a day on
-my painting.”
-
-“But Master, he says he never sees you there, so how do you explain
-these two hours a day?”
-
-“Excellency, the figure of Judas must be of incomparable evil. Every day
-I search for this face in the criminal quarter, and every day I fail to
-find the evil that I am looking for. If I cannot find this man, however,
-I can use the head of the prior—it would do admirably, but I have
-hesitated for fear of hurting his feelings.”
-
-Ludovico slapped his knees and roared with laughter. There were no more
-complaints.
-
-Finally, in 1498, the scaffolding was removed from the painting and
-Leonardo’s masterpiece was revealed. The twelve apostles grouped at the
-table are shown each responding in his own way to the words of Christ,
-“One of you shall betray me.” Again hundreds flocked to see this latest
-marvel of Leonardo’s. Its striking influence was felt by generations of
-painters. Even now, more than four hundred and fifty years later, the
-world still comes to stand before the genius of Leonardo da Vinci in the
-refectory of Santa Maria delle Grazie.
-
-
-The clouds of war were gathering again over Italy. In April of 1498,
-Charles VIII of France died and his successor was Louis of Orleans, who
-became Louis XII. The new King of France laid claim to the Dukedom of
-Milan, and Ludovico again tried to form an alliance against him. But the
-years of juggling enemy against enemy and friend against friend were now
-coming to an end. No one trusted Il Moro any more, and suddenly he
-realized that he was to be alone in this new fight. After nearly twenty
-years of power sustained by powerful alliances, Ludovico was forced to
-turn to his own people of Lombardy. Frantically he tried to correct the
-injustices of years. The people had been cruelly taxed to support the
-extravagances of the Sforza court, and, in addition, they had been badly
-treated by petty government officials. Ludovico now sought to repay the
-past miseries of his people and to rally them to his support. In such a
-spirit he remembered his court painter, Leonardo da Vinci, and gave him
-a vineyard and considerable piece of land not far from the Porta
-Vercellina.
-
-Now, for the first time in his life, Leonardo knew financial security.
-With the income from the vineyard, and in the peace of his estate, he
-was left free to follow his own researches. He took no notice that his
-“peace” was surrounded by the threat of war. Indeed, he remained aloof
-from politics and court intrigues as much as was possible for a man
-living in the midst of such chaotic times.
-
-Leonardo now had the opportunity to follow up an early interest—the
-study of plants. He made many beautiful drawings; no plant was too small
-to catch his eye. His notes on botany began to grow. With his genius for
-observation and analysis of nature, Leonardo made some extraordinary
-discoveries of botanical laws entirely unknown before his time. He wrote
-of the phenomenon of _heliotropism_, or the movement of plants toward or
-away from the sunlight. In addition, he described the phenomenon known
-as _geotropism_, or the growth of plants according to gravitational law,
-as for example, roots growing downward and shoots growing upward. He
-also defined the laws of phyllotaxis, which describe the system or order
-of leaf arrangement on a plant’s stem. That is, leaves are arranged
-spirally around a stem so that the third leaf above grows out over the
-third leaf below on one type of plant; or, on another type, the two
-third leaves are over the two third leaves below. The same natural laws
-apply to the branches of plants as well; they occur so that every leaf
-and branch can receive sufficient air and light. Amazingly enough, these
-laws, which Leonardo described so completely, were not rediscovered
-until almost two centuries later!
-
-Leonardo went even further in his botanical studies. He experimented
-with gourds, planting them in various aqueous solutions; this
-anticipated modern methods of growing plants in chemicals. He also
-tested the actions of arsenic and mercury poisons in plants. He
-reproduced the shape and form of leaves by pressing them on paper coated
-with lampblack, a method that was not used again until the nineteenth
-century. Carefully noted, too, in his writings was the rising of sap
-from the roots to the branches by capillary action; this, too, was not
-rediscovered until much later—in the eighteenth century. Leonardo also
-extracted oils and essences from flowers and studied the influences of
-altitude on the development of vegetation. Indeed Leonardo’s very
-approaches to a systematic classification of plants were the forerunners
-of modern methods of classifying.
-
-In the seclusion of his own home, as he continued his studies of
-geometry with Pacioli, Leonardo again turned to his observations of the
-heavens. On the roof of his house he had set up a small observatory for
-watching the sky at night. Often he looked at the stars through a
-pinhole in a sheet of paper. Leonardo did this to stop the “twinkling”
-of the stars which he recognized as an optical illusion. Moreover, by
-looking at the stars in this manner, he noticed that some were larger
-than others, and imagined to himself how our own earth might look from
-them. Would we not be but another “star” in a vast collection of stars?
-And if that were true—how could the earth be the center of the universe?
-By the same imaginary reasoning, he speculated on how we must look to
-someone on the moon. Realizing that the moonlight on earth faintly
-illuminates the dark side of the earth, he reasoned that then there must
-be an “earthlight” doing the same on the moon. Thus he was the first to
-explain the dim reflected light on the dark side of the moon. Moreover,
-Leonardo is known to have looked at the moon through a convex lens, and
-perhaps even a form of telescope. Indeed, he had built telescopic-type
-tubes with lenses in them and had written directions for their use. It
-seems certain that at about this time Leonardo became convinced of the
-heliocentric theory, the theory that states the sun is the center of our
-universe. On a sheet of mathematical notes Leonardo wrote in large
-letters, “the sun does not move.”
-
-During this time he continued to seek out books on astronomy. Leonardo
-was familiar with Aristotle’s _Meteorology_, Archimedes’ _On the Center
-of Gravity_, and with _Problems in Aristotle’s Books of the Sky and the
-World_, a work by Albert of Saxony. This last book Leonardo had to read
-with the help of a Latin dictionary, because his Latin was not good. He
-had already read Plutarch, who had defined the moon as a solid. Plutarch
-had written further that the “spots” on the moon were the result of
-shadows cast by irregularities on its surface. This theory, that was
-apparently abandoned during the Middle Ages, supported the conclusions
-that Leonardo had reached by his own observations. But he still
-struggled against a mistaken idea of his own. For a long while he
-maintained that there were seas and waters upon the moon which accounted
-for the sunlight being reflected so brilliantly.
-
-Meanwhile, in July of 1499, the French army had reached Lombardy.
-Ludovico was now in a state of desperation. He tried to appeal to the
-people of Milan, explaining that their heavy taxes had been due to the
-constant threats from abroad. But, however hard he tried to arouse their
-sense of loyalty to him, the public of Milan turned a deaf ear. They had
-not forgotten how Ludovico had allied himself with Charles VIII—a
-foreign king! Ludovico now had to put his trust in his army commander,
-Galeazzo da Sanseverino, despite warnings that this was a man of
-doubtful loyalty. Moreover, to make matters worse, Louis XII had
-succeeded in forming an alliance against Ludovico; and, among his allies
-was a powerful cardinal, son of Pope Alexander VI—the notorious Cesare
-Borgia.
-
-From a note on a page of designs for supplying and heating a bath we
-know that Leonardo continued his quiet life, only vaguely disturbed by
-the political upheaval taking place around him. His note reads, “On the
-first day of August 1499 I wrote here of movement and weight.” He had
-made many experiments and calculations concerning the movement and
-weight of objects. He had drawn, for example, the flight of an arrow to
-describe motion through air and although he wrote no specific formula,
-he marked the three stages of its trajectory—the initial push, the
-slowing and the steeper downward path as the arrow’s momentum was
-overcome by the resistance of the air. He also defined the law of
-movement on an inclined plane and he arrived at the root principle of
-Newton’s law of gravitation when he wrote, “every weight tends to fall
-toward the center by the shortest way.”
-
-A diagram of this period is probably the first scientific graph.
-Leonardo had experimented with two balls dropped from a height. First he
-dropped them together and then one after the other. In attempting to
-solve the mathematical problems presented by these falling bodies he
-drew a graph of vertical and horizontal lines. The times it took for the
-balls to fall were marked on the horizontal lines and the distances on
-the vertical lines—thus, he could trace their relationship.
-
-But this peaceful time of productive work was running out for Leonardo.
-Ludovico’s commander, Galeazzo, had yielded the fortress of Alessandria
-to the French at the first battle. Ludovico himself had sent his sons
-and his treasure to his brother, Cardinal Ascanio, in Germany. When he
-saw that his cause was lost, he turned the Sforza castle over to
-Bernardino da Corte, a trusted commander, making certain that it was
-fully supplied with arms and food. Then in sorrow, Ludovico Sforza, Duke
-of Milan, left his city for the last time as ruler of Lombardy. The
-gates of Milan were opened to the French in October of 1499, and
-Bernardino da Corte surrendered the Sforza castle.
-
-French soldiers now occupied Milan as conquerors and the people of the
-city were in a state of confusion. Those who could made their peace with
-the French; but others, who had been supporters of Ludovico, fled to
-avoid arrest. Leonardo, who would be suspect to the French, packed up
-his few possessions—although he did manage to retain his estate—and
-left, together with Pacioli and an apprentice, for Mantua.
-
- [Illustration: _Leonardo had to flee Milan._]
-
-
-
-
- 9
- _Cesare Borgia_
-
-
-Leonardo, Pacioli, and Salai, the apprentice, arrived in Mantua in
-February of the year 1500. They were given refuge in the castle of
-Isabella d’Este, who was the sister of Beatrice, and the wife of
-Francesco Gonzaga, governor of Mantua. Isabella was one of the eminent
-women of her time and attracted to her court the intellectual life of
-Italy. In Leonardo she recognized the man of genius; indeed, she treated
-him as an equal, putting her castle at his disposal. She persuaded him
-to paint her portrait and Leonardo commenced a preparatory drawing.
-
-In the evenings at the castle there were discussions and music and here
-Leonardo again met his pupil and companion on the trip from Florence so
-many years ago—Atalante Migliorotti who had left Milan in 1490 to assume
-the post of court musician to Isabella.
-
-Although Leonardo had found a haven of peace in the political storm that
-raged about the city state of Mantua, he and Pacioli took to the road
-again for reasons unknown. Isabella d’Este, who still wanted Leonardo at
-her court, sent many a letter and messenger in the following years to
-bring Leonardo back—first to finish the portrait and then, when that
-failed, to sell to her any picture that Leonardo wished to send.
-Strangely enough, however, Leonardo seems to have turned his back upon
-the one sympathetic person he had met in a world of indifference.
-
-
-The first, warm breezes of spring were blowing over the lagoons of
-Venice when Leonardo and Pacioli stepped ashore on the Piazzetta, or
-Little Square of San Marco. But the beauty of this jewel-like city
-rising from the sea was momentarily ignored by the two travelers for an
-angry, frightened crowd had gathered about the Doge’s palace on the
-Piazzetta.
-
-The people of Venice were fearful because their fleet had just suffered
-a crushing defeat by the Turks. This meant that their power at sea, once
-supreme, was now no more. Year by year, moreover, their possessions in
-the east had been slowly whittled away, and now the city itself was
-threatened by invasion. At this same time, the Venetian ambassador,
-Manenti, hoping to make peace with the Turks, had been rudely rejected
-by them. Panic soon swept the city and rumors of the bloodthirsty
-infidel passed from person to person like the rush of an ugly wind.
-Barricades were put up and windows were barred. In this charged
-atmosphere, Leonardo and Pacioli sought out their lodgings.
-
-Soon after Leonardo’s arrival here—either because his reputation had
-preceded him or, more likely, because of Fra Luca Pacioli’s
-recommendations—he became directly involved with the defenses of Venice.
-Immediately he was sent on an inspection trip of the city’s existing
-defenses, especially those inland from where an invasion would probably
-come. When he had seen them, he recommended a system of defenses along
-the Isonzo river near the present border of Yugoslavia, using the river
-itself to the disadvantage of the enemy. He also made suggestions for
-the improvement of forts, and even drew up plans for a completely new
-type—a circular fort. This consisted of a central, circular fort
-surrounded by two belts of fortresses each separated by a moat. In the
-outside moat were four semicircular outposts. Communication was by
-underground galleries. The total absence of superstructure and
-projecting balconies was a new idea for the times. Another new defense
-idea was to station in the moat itself a low, thick tower almost
-completely submerged, defended by a thin opening near the waterline. It
-was reached from the main fort by an underground passage and the
-gunsmoke was removed by vents. According to Leonardo no enemy could
-conceal himself in any part of the defenses and not be seen from such an
-outpost.
-
-Leonardo’s most unusual scheme for defending Venice, however, was his
-idea of approaching an enemy fleet under the water and then putting
-holes in the hulls of their ships. Actually, the idea of diving was not
-a new one. Aristotle had written of diving and diving bells, and
-certainly the stories of pearl fishers in the Orient were well known in
-the Renaissance. But Leonardo designed a diver’s suit closely resembling
-those used today. This consisted of a complete suit of leather with
-helmet and eyepieces; it was made airtight by spirals of steel at the
-joints. He then added a bladder for holding air which fastened inside
-the suit at the diver’s chest. It is possible that Leonardo also
-invented an air chamber that could be used by the diver while under
-water—but he was very secretive about this invention for fear of how men
-might abuse such a discovery. He wrote, “... and this I do not publish
-or divulge, on account of the evil nature of man, who would practice
-assassinations at the bottom of the seas....”
-
-Leonardo felt the same way about a “submarine” that he presented to the
-Councilors and Tribunal of Venice. This resembled a turtle’s shell with
-a raised bump on the center which was the “periscope.” When submerged
-the water probably rose to an area just around the “periscope,” but,
-again, the information about its air-supply is missing and the only
-reference to it is a reminder to close the “l—.” In addition, he
-invented a system of screws mounted in tongs with the borer in the
-middle for putting holes in the bottoms of enemy ships, and at the same
-time he thought of a defense against such an attack by designing the
-defending vessels with double hulls.
-
-Among Leonardo’s other maritime devices were designs for boats that
-could dredge canals, harbors, and lagoons. What was the result of all
-these plans? We do not know. Whether any one of them was used against
-the Turks is a mystery.
-
-At any rate, Leonardo and Pacioli left Venice that same spring and
-arrived in Florence in April of 1500. One of the purposes of Leonardo’s
-journey was to visit his father who was now living on Via Ghibellina
-with his fourth wife. Leonardo was now forty-eight. Still tall and
-straight with the strength of his youth, his face prematurely aged and
-his hair thinning back from his high forehead, Leonardo was more than
-ever an outstanding looking man. He still scorned fashionable clothes
-and dressed according to his own comfort which made him even more
-noticeable among the crowd. His deep-set eyes with their direct and
-penetrating glance, framed by his full, reddish beard, never missed a
-thing, although he now wore spectacles at his work.
-
-Now that he was back in Florence, Leonardo needed lodgings and a job. He
-had banked his small savings, and he did not want to touch that. His
-father’s house with the five children of his present wife plus the sons
-from his previous marriages was too full to accommodate Leonardo.
-Moreover, the relationship between Piero and Leonardo was polite but
-distant, as Piero preferred the children of his later marriages.
-
-Luckily, the place to live and the commission Leonardo needed presented
-themselves at the same time. The Church of the Annunciation of the
-Servite Order of Monks needed an altarpiece, and, as Leonardo’s fame was
-great, they offered him and his apprentice quarters in the monastery.
-Here, in the solitude of a monastic cell, Leonardo was able to return to
-his own researches. His long association with Fra Luca Pacioli continued
-as they worked together on Pacioli’s edition of Euclid’s _Elements_. At
-the same time, with his absorption in geometry, Leonardo commenced his
-studies of the transformation of solids; that is, changing the shape of
-something to another shape without diminishing or increasing its
-substance.
-
-In his preoccupation with geometry, Leonardo had apparently done little
-about the commission which the Servite monks had given him. He finally
-yielded to their complaints, however, and commenced to draw the
-preliminary study for the subject, which was “St. Anne with the Virgin
-and Child.” Again his knowledge of geometry is most apparent in the
-finely constructed composition, every gesture of which is as plotted as
-a geometric exercise. In April of 1501, the drawing was finished; it
-caused an immediate sensation throughout Florence. For two days the
-public was allowed to pass in front of it.
-
-But now a change was taking place in Leonardo. He was no longer content
-with simply painting. His highly original researches for pictures had
-slowly grown to the point where the research was more important than
-painting. In a sense the scientist had taken the brush from the artist.
-In two letters from Isabella d’Este’s emissary in Florence we learn, “He
-is entirely wrapped up in geometry and has no patience for painting.”
-This excerpt from a letter dated April 8, 1501, was followed six days
-later by another which said in part, “In brief, his mathematical
-experiments have made painting so distasteful to him that he cannot even
-bear to take up a brush.”
-
-
-A few months after the completion of the St. Anne drawing, Leonardo
-received a letter signed by Cesare Borgia, Duke of Valentinois. Leonardo
-frowned and thought back to his last days in Milan. When King Louis XII
-of France had entered the city, he had summoned the painter of the “Last
-Supper” to an audience. The king had been generous in his praise and had
-tried to persuade Leonardo to remain. At that same audience had also
-been Cesare Borgia, an ally of the French. Leonardo remembered the man
-now—the dark hair and eyes, the black, arched eyebrows, and the face
-marked by some old disease. He was a powerful-chested, thin-hipped man
-who had originally been made a cardinal by his father, Pope Alexander
-VI. But the attractions of secular power soon persuaded him to abandon
-this title. With the enthusiastic help of his father, Borgia had fought,
-murdered, and deceived his way to a formidable position of authority in
-these last years. Leonardo, in the seclusion of the monastery, had
-lately heard that Borgia’s army had even been at the gates of Florence.
-
-The letter addressed to Leonardo was an offer to assume the post of
-Architect and Military Engineer to His Excellency, Cesare Borgia. He
-thought of Ludovico Sforza—defeated and captured at the battle of Novara
-just a year ago as he attempted to regain his dukedom. Now the duke was
-a prisoner at Loches in Touraine; Leonardo had written of him, “The duke
-lost his State, his personal possessions and his liberty, and none of
-his enterprises have been completed.” And Leonardo also thought of his
-equestrian monument still standing in the castle being used for target
-practice by the French archers. Like the duke, nothing of his own had
-been completed either. Perhaps this Borgia offer was an opportunity.
-Leonardo decided to accept it.
-
-In May of 1502, after having presented himself to Cesare Borgia in Rome,
-Leonardo began his hectic travels through Tuscany and Umbria. He was to
-inspect the fortresses and cities of Cesare’s new conquests there, and
-to make whatever recommendations he felt necessary for their
-improvements. Arriving in Piombino, he at once set down a project for
-draining the marshes and reclaiming the land. Also, while he was here,
-he spent hours by the sea watching the waves curl in from the Adriatic
-and studying the crash of water over the beaches. Moving on to Arrezzo,
-he drew up the first in a series of remarkable maps for the army of
-Vitellozzo which, with the backing of Cesare Borgia, was marching
-against Florence. These maps are bird’s-eye views of Tuscany and Umbria,
-and somewhat resemble modern aerial photographs. Drawn from Leonardo’s
-own observations, the green mountains stand, according to their height,
-in relief, with the roads winding over them and down through the
-valleys. The streams and their tributaries are in blue and even the
-villages and cities are drawn with great exactitude. Indeed Leonardo had
-learned his lessons from old Toscanelli well, and he was one of the
-first to bring the art of cartography to such perfection.
-
-In July and August Leonardo was in Urbino and Pesaro, and by the 8th of
-August he had reached Rimini. Here he strengthened the fortifications
-and then rode quickly on to Cesena. Between Cesena, capital of the
-Romagna, and Porto Cesanatico, he spent from the middle of August to
-September planning a canal between the two, redesigning government
-buildings, and drawing up a new quarter to be built for the city of
-Cesena. At this time he constructed an instrument for telling him the
-speed of water currents in a stream. It told him whether the flow was
-swifter at the surface or at the bottom or on one side or the other of
-the stream’s bed.
-
-In the meantime, Florence, alarmed at the growing power of Cesare
-Borgia, appealed to Charles d’Amboise, Regent of Milan for France, to
-come to her aid. Charles responded in the absence of the French King and
-helped to protect Florence. The enemies of Cesare took advantage of this
-to form an alliance, and soon Cesare was being forced back from his
-newly won possessions. Cesare himself then hastened to Milan, and there
-he suddenly came face to face again with Louis, the King of France, who
-was on his way to Naples. Borgia, who could exert great charm and
-influence when he wished, persuaded the king that, all rumors to the
-contrary, he, Cesare, was fighting the enemies of France. Again he won
-over the French, which greatly strengthened his position. Then, from
-Pavia, he issued a decree placing every facility possible at Leonardo’s
-disposal. In addition, he instructed all officials to help Leonardo in
-every matter, referring to him as “our highly esteemed court architect.”
-
-While Leonardo was in Porto Cesanatico, a delegation from Bayzid II,
-Sultan of Turkey, paid a visit to Cesare Borgia. Among other things the
-delegation was looking for an engineer to build a bridge between
-Constantinople and Pera to replace a temporary wooden structure.
-Leonardo designed for them a single-arched bridge with double ramps at
-either end (looking very much like a present-day “thruway” entrance). He
-provided that it should be approximately twelve hundred feet long,
-eighty feet wide, and one hundred and forty feet above the water.
-
- [Illustration: _Da Vinci’s proposed bridge from Constantinople
- (Istanbul) to Pera. Looking very much like a modern “thruway”
- entrance, it was to have double ramps on both sides._]
-
-In his travels through the countryside, Leonardo could not help but
-notice how primitive the mills were. Feeling how strongly the wind blew
-in from the sea, he designed a windmill with a roof that turned with the
-sails. For the mechanism inside he devised a band brake—a semicircle of
-wood into which the large cogwheel of the mill was forced. This mill
-resembles the “Dutch” mills of the Netherlands and was among the first
-of its type to be brought into existence.
-
-In the fall Leonardo was at Imola. There he created another of his
-beautifully rendered maps. He drew this with the help of a magnetic
-compass of his own invention. It consisted of a board with an arc on it
-and a compass needle, and was probably the first magnetic needle on a
-horizontal axis. This time the map was of the city itself, the walls,
-the castle and the principal buildings all touched with color and the
-river winding through the fields. Drawn in the shape of a circle, it
-resembles a view through a telescope from directly above. In Imola, too,
-he met Niccolò Machiavelli, the famous historian and political
-scientist, who was an emissary from the Signoria, the Council which now
-governed Florence. These two men became friends and, later,
-collaborators in Leonardo’s scheme to make the Arno river navigable to
-the sea.
-
-At this time Cesare Borgia, having achieved great success in his
-military campaigns and confident of his conquests, decided to return to
-Rome. With the disbanding of Borgia’s headquarters at Imola, Leonardo’s
-duties were finished. Together with his new friend Niccolò Machiavelli
-and two other Florentines, he left Imola and the service of Cesare
-Borgia to return to Florence.
-
-In January of 1503, a mathematician named Giovanni Battista Danti
-attempted a flight in a machine that he had designed. This flight was
-part of the entertainment at a wedding reception in Perugia. Danti
-climbed into his apparatus on top of the tower of St. Mary of the
-Virgin. It was pushed off into the air, hovered a few seconds, then
-began slowly drifting toward the ground. But suddenly, one of its wings
-hit a building projection and it crashed. Danti was carried away with a
-broken leg.
-
-The news of the event traveled quickly to Florence.
-
-When Leonardo heard about it, he eagerly questioned all those who had
-either seen it or had heard it described first hand. Danti’s attempted
-flight excited Leonardo for now he realized that he was no longer alone
-in his search. With a sense of urgency he returned to the problems of
-flying. He felt now that the solution to flight might be in the swift
-gusts of air through the ravines and the spread wings of the eagle
-drifting high in the sky.
-
-
-
-
- 10
- _Shattered Hopes_
-
-
-Before Leonardo could return to the problem of flight, however, he was
-again faced with the necessity of supporting himself and his growing
-household. The small fees he received for taking on apprentices hardly
-covered the cost of housing and feeding them. Moreover, the equipment he
-had to buy for his scientific researches added further to his strained
-budget. So, when a servant from Francesco del Giocondo, a rich
-Florentine merchant, presented himself at the gate with the request that
-Leonardo accept a commission to paint Francesco’s wife, Leonardo was
-only too glad to accept. The name of Francesco’s wife was Madonna Lisa,
-or Mona Lisa for short. Leonardo painted her portrait on and off for the
-next three years. Thus, what started as a minor commission ended as the
-one painting—in addition to the “Last Supper”—that most people today
-associate with the name of Leonardo da Vinci.
-
-Having secured this work, Leonardo turned back to his studies of birds
-in flight and the nature of air. The soaring wings of eagles and hawks
-and the way they rode the currents with hardly a dip of their spread
-wings guided Leonardo’s thinking from pure mechanics to machines that
-act more on the principle of the glider. He proposed to write a treatise
-on the nature of birds’ flight, and, with his usual thoroughness, he
-began to weigh, dissect, and reconstruct various types of birds and
-their wing structure. He realized that one of the main difficulties of
-gliding was maintaining balance, or, more accurately, maintaining the
-center of gravity. From previous observations Leonardo had noted that
-man is capable of making the same motions that a bird does. He had also
-measured the strength of a man’s legs and had calculated that man has
-twice the power in his leg muscles that he needs for standing.
-Consequently he began to redesign his machine making use of man’s arms
-and legs to operate or “flap” the wings instead of standing him on a
-platform.
-
-The first of Leonardo’s new designs was a sort of harness apparatus
-strapped across the shoulders of the flyer who was supposed to be able
-to keep himself balanced by moving the lower part of his body. He could
-manipulate the flight by handles that were connected to the flexible,
-outer parts of the wings. These wings were designed from the webbed
-wings of the bat. Surprisingly enough, this device closely resembled the
-experimental gliders used by Otto Lilienthal almost four centuries later
-in Germany.
-
-Leonardo was now approaching other solutions to pure flight when further
-hostilities interrupted his work. Florence and Pisa were in bitter
-rivalry, and their struggle had assumed the proportions of a major war.
-The Florentine army was now practically at the gates of Pisa. Niccolò
-Machiavelli urged the Signoria to enlist the help of Leonardo da Vinci,
-who might be able to think of an immediate plan for destroying Pisa and
-her army. Never one to think in terms of an immediate battle or a
-temporary success, Leonardo put forth a daring and sweeping plan that
-would forever reduce the power of Pisa. The plan was as simple as it was
-monumental—divert the Arno river from its course into two canals that
-would empty into the sea at Leghorn south of Pisa. In this way, Pisa
-would lose her water supply and her opening to the sea.
-
-The plan met with immediate approval and by the end of July 1503,
-Leonardo was sent out to survey the entire course of the river. He was
-accompanied by Giovanni “the Piper,” a man who was frequently employed
-on minor engineering projects and who was the official player of the
-pipes to the city of Florence. Giovanni was also the father of Benvenuto
-Cellini, who became the most famous goldsmith of the Renaissance. As
-they made their way to Pisa, Leonardo made some more of his
-extraordinary maps of the area, paying particular attention to the
-course of the Arno and its tributaries. These maps later inspired him to
-plan a whole series showing the main watersheds of Italy.
-
-When he rode into the Florentine camp drawn up before Pisa, Leonardo
-designed from his observations and maps, a dam on the Arno to regulate
-the course of the river. This bird’s-eye view map is a marvel of
-exactness. It shows the flow of the river hitting the dam with its
-swirling backwash and overflow. Leonardo’s knowledge of the movement of
-water was so great and his craftsmanship in drawing so fine that the
-water in this map seems to flow before one’s eyes. One of the main
-problems in regulating the Arno was its tendency to continually be
-shifting its bed by the deposits of new sediment, and Leonardo realized
-it would be a long time before this project could be completed.
-
-When he returned to Florence he presented to the Signoria, as part of
-his survey, various machines to hasten the excavation of the Arno. He
-had designed a crane that would assist in the digging out of two
-different levels at the same time. He also submitted the results of his
-calculations on the saving of muscular energy by the use of such
-machines. In addition, Leonardo proposed to use the water in the canals
-for irrigation purposes and had even calculated what the volume and
-velocity of a jet of water would be if projected from an opening in the
-bottom of the canal wall into an irrigation ditch. As if this were not
-enough, he had invented a practical method of piling as a foundation for
-the lock-basins to protect them against the dangers of erosion.
-
-A separate map of this period on the flow of rivers in general was
-intended to relate to his treatise on the nature of water. In this
-treatise is the first outline of the fundamental principles of
-hydrodynamics, as for example:
-
-The velocity of a current increases with the slope and decreases with
-the winding of the riverbed.
-
-The volume of a river is in proportion to the width of its bed, the
-slope and the depth of the water being equal.
-
-The slope and width being equal, the speed of the current is greatest in
-the deepest part of the river.
-
-The excavation force increases at the narrowest section of the river.
-
-
-Because of the grumbling of the military commanders at what they
-considered a waste of time, Machiavelli had to intervene with the
-Signoria before Leonardo was sent out again with documents of authority
-to continue with his plans. He spent well into the fall surveying the
-Arno and in October he was back in Florence.
-
-Meanwhile the fighting between Pisa and Florence had been lessened by
-two political changes. In August Pope Alexander VI had died and his son
-Cesare Borgia became seriously ill. The Republic of Florence was now
-free of its most dangerous enemies—the Borgias. The city relaxed in its
-new security and the hostilities between Florence and Pisa died down to
-an uneasy armed watch.
-
-Leonardo quickly took advantage of the situation to present an early
-dream of his to the Signoria. He again put forth his idea of a
-commercial canal to the sea and made mention of the great advantages
-there would be for all the mills, lumber yards, forges and other
-commercial interests in utilizing the water power that would be
-available from his project. Piero Soderini, the governor of the
-city-state of Florence, was impressed and thought of the glory it would
-bring to Florence and himself. He told Leonardo he would present it to
-the Signoria.
-
-Leonardo now plunged into a winter of great activity. Forced to draw
-from his savings, he had rejoined the guild of painters in October of
-1503, and then applied for the commission of painting the murals in the
-council chamber of the Palace of the Signoria. It had been planned to
-decorate this great hall with scenes commemorating famous Florentine
-victories, and Leonardo chose the battle of Anghiari where the soldiers
-of Florence defeated the Milanese in 1440. In addition to working on the
-“Mona Lisa” and continuing with the canal project—for which he was now
-designing great suction pumps to lift rivers from one level to
-another—he turned again to astronomy and geology.
-
-Leonardo, while investigating the course of the upper Arno, had come
-across much evidence that the land there had at one time been completely
-under water. Various types of ancient ocean life and vegetation lay
-scattered in layers along the ridges of the mountains, and these
-Leonardo collected and brought back to his studio. He wrote, “above the
-plains of Italy where now birds fly in flocks, fishes were wont to
-wander in large shoals.” He reread Ptolemy, the ancient Greek geographer
-Strabo, and even Sir John Mandeville, an English author of travel books,
-in his quest for knowledge of distant places. He talked to travelers,
-sailors, and wrote to friends to send him information about the
-countries they had seen or lived in. Strabo, in particular, had set
-forth the doctrine that the earth’s transformation had taken place by
-the forces of volcanoes and water, but the wisdom of these early men had
-been obscured by the closed minds of the Middle Ages.
-
-Even in his own time of reawakening knowledge—the Renaissance—Leonardo
-had to contend with the combined superstition of the Church and the
-ignorance of misguided scholars. For example, the Church believed in the
-great flood, as described in the Bible, and the scholars claimed that if
-what Leonardo said were true—that the earth was the result of an
-evolutionary process—there would have been written records. To this
-latter Leonardo responded, “... sufficient for us is the testimony of
-things produced in the salt waters and now found again in the high
-mountains far from the seas.” But Leonardo’s conception of the evolution
-of the earth was mistaken in one respect. He regarded the earth as
-organic—living—and the flow of water he believed to be like the flow of
-blood in man. Indeed, according to Leonardo, all living creatures were
-reflections of a living, breathing earth. It was only when he again
-turned his eyes inquiringly toward the moon and the laws of the universe
-that he began to realize his error.
-
-It had been the idea that the earth was the center of the universe which
-supported Leonardo’s theory of an organic earth. Yet after years of
-observation and study he abandoned this theory and, with the eye of a
-man centuries ahead of his time, he wrote in his notes, “The moon has
-every month a winter and a summer. And it has greater colds and greater
-heats and its equinoxes are colder than ours.” He went further and
-identified the elements existing on the moon such as “water, air, and
-fire,” and described them and their functions as being like those on our
-own earth. In so doing he recognized the existence of the moon as a
-solid in space, reflecting the light of the sun—one of many “stars” in a
-universe. With his acceptance of this concept he realized that the earth
-could not be organic.
-
-
-In May of 1504, the Signoria complained to Leonardo that there had been
-no progress on the proposed paintings for their council chamber, even
-though he had already been partially paid for them. Accordingly, he was
-forced to sign a document that he must be finished by February of next
-year or refund all monies paid him. As was his custom he had made many
-preliminary drawings. Although he was well acquainted with horses he had
-again researched their anatomy and actions. Pages of rearing, frightened
-horses and men in combat covered his studio tables. On one of these
-pages there are sketches of the heads of a lion, some horses and a
-man—all with fierce expressions on their faces. Here Leonardo hinted at
-the comparative anatomy of expression in man and animal that Darwin was
-to write about almost four hundred years later.
-
-But the paintings could wait, for now the Arno River was in spring
-flood. The time had arrived to make the first attempts at diverting the
-river into its new course. Leonardo was again in the field supervising
-the work. There had been much opposition to Leonardo’s canal from both
-the army captains and the Signoria. It was called a whim and a crazy
-idea, but Piero Soderini and Niccolò Machiavelli were stubborn in their
-defense of Leonardo’s plan and they overcame all opposition to it. And
-indeed, the raising of the sluice gates was successful and the Arno
-actually flowed into its new bed. The tensions in the camp and in the
-Council of Florence were eased. The only sad person was Leonardo, for he
-had just learned of the death of his father.
-
-Leonardo felt the loss deeply. Outwardly, however, he only acknowledged
-the death of his father at a distance. Not only had Leonardo and his
-father drifted apart over the years, Piero left nothing to Leonardo in
-his will. His father’s other children quarreled among themselves over
-what money he did leave. Leonardo’s one friend in the family was Uncle
-Francesco, who was still living in Vinci. When he heard of his brother’s
-will, Francesco made out a will of his own and left everything to the
-nephew he loved—Leonardo.
-
-After having successfully diverted the Arno river, it was now necessary
-for Leonardo to return to the painting commissioned by the Signoria for
-its council chamber. But recently, Leonardo had suffered a rebuff in
-this work. Originally he had been given the whole room to do but now the
-opposite wall had been assigned to another man—Michelangelo Buonarroti.
-Leonardo had first met the young Michelangelo when he helped to judge
-the best location for Michelangelo’s monumental statue of David. The two
-men were opposites in every way. Leonardo, fifty-two years old,
-carefully dressed, cool and detached, was a man whose every action was
-the result of a thoughtful and analytical mind. Michelangelo, twenty-six
-years old, his clothes rumpled and covered with marble dust, was
-passionate and moody—an impulsive youth totally dedicated to art. They
-did not like each other, and now Leonardo was forced into a rivalry for
-which he had no heart.
-
-The duel between these two giants of art aroused the whole of Florence
-and there was a constant stream of people watching them at work.
-Michelangelo was given a studio in the hospital of Sant’ Onofrio and
-Leonardo was working in the Papal Chamber in Santa Maria Novella. Among
-the many people who came to watch Leonardo was a young man of nineteen.
-He was already a pupil of Perugino and the experience of meeting and
-learning from Leonardo was to influence him the rest of his life. His
-name was Raffaello Sanzio—one of the great Renaissance painters of Italy
-and known to us by the name of Raphael.
-
-While Leonardo worked at Santa Maria Novella he had the opportunity of
-continuing his studies in anatomy. Dissections at that time were
-novelties and when one was performed the doors were thrown open to the
-public. Leonardo must have attended the public dissections at the Church
-of Santa Croce. Now at Santa Maria Novella there was a hospital, and
-here Leonardo was able to continue his own dissections without
-interruption. In a cool room below the hospital where bodies were kept
-Leonardo worked late into the night. By the flickering lights of candles
-and in the silence of the world about him he studied, drew, and wrote in
-his notes of the wonders of the human body.
-
- [Illustration: _In a cool room below the hospital, Leonardo worked
- late into the night._]
-
-He performed autopsies on people who had died natural deaths—a special
-permission granted to him by the monks of the church, and among these
-autopsies are the first written reports of some of the diseases that are
-the causes of death. Arteriosclerosis, or stony growths in the blood
-vessels, and pulmonary tuberculosis, a nut-like growth in the lung, are
-among the discoveries Leonardo made in his lonely searches, although he
-did not use these medical names for them.
-
-Above all Leonardo was attracted to the function of the muscles,
-especially those in the arms and legs. So faithfully, in fact, did he
-record the origin and insertion of all the various muscles that these
-drawings can be used as anatomical models today. Moreover, he believed
-that a good drawing was worth pages of words describing human anatomy.
-The muscles were rendered as cords so as to better understand their
-function. He described this function as one of pulling instead of
-pushing and he noted that for every muscle there is an opposing muscle.
-When one contracts the other expands. For example, when you tighten the
-biceps in your arm you can feel the looseness of the triceps, the muscle
-on the opposite side.
-
-
-As the end of the summer of 1504 approached, Leonardo’s dream of the
-canal from Florence to the sea was destroyed. The summer had been hot
-and without rain. The water in the canal dried up and the Arno river
-returned to its original course. All the old arguments against the plan
-were revived. The Florentine army captains rebelled against the job of
-defending a useless project. Again Soderini and Machiavelli intervened.
-After heated debates in the Council of Eighty, which had been called
-into special session, Machiavelli himself was sent out to oversee the
-work. It was brought almost to completion when in late October disaster
-struck. The rains that had failed to come in summer fell from the
-heavens in great cloudbursts. Storm after storm swept the valleys. The
-workmen left and the soldiers were recalled. The Pisan army rushed in to
-fill up the diggings and one final storm washed away the dream to
-nothing but eroded mounds of dirt.
-
-Leonardo buried his disappointment in other work. When the drawing for
-the Battle of Anghiari was ready for transfer to the wall of the council
-chamber, he had a special scaffolding made of his own invention which
-worked on the principle of a pair of scissors standing on end, with a
-long platform on top. As the legs were spread the scaffolding was
-lowered and when they were pinched together it was raised. The wall had
-been prepared with a special mixture which he hoped would bring out the
-brilliance of his tempera colors. With several assistants who had been
-assigned to him by the Signoria the violence of the Battle of Anghiari
-was transferred to the wall and the actual painting was begun.
-
-During the winter months Leonardo would relax from his work on the huge
-painting and his dissections to roam the country around Florence. He
-visited the slaughterhouses where the animals were killed and prepared
-for market. Here he was able to examine the hearts of animals just
-slaughtered and to note that the heart retained its action until the
-body was almost cold. He made a glass model of the aorta (the main
-artery leading from the heart) of an ox with which he could experiment
-on the flow of the blood. He intended to add to it a glass tube for one
-of the semilunar valves of the heart. He also experimented with a frog,
-dissecting its brain, heart, and entrails and noted that it ceased to
-twitch only when the spinal cord was severed. In his notes, he wrote,
-“The frog instantly dies when the spinal cord is pierced; and previous
-to this it lived without head, without heart or any bowels or intestines
-or skin; and here therefore it would seem lies the foundation of
-movement and life.” He was of course searching for the reasons that
-muscles moved and from where the impulses originated.
-
-One of Leonardo’s favorite places to visit was Fiesole where his uncle
-Allessandro Amadori lived. Uncle Allessandro was the brother of
-Leonardo’s first stepmother and, since he had loved her so much, he
-likewise felt an affection for Allessandro. At Fiesole, which rises over
-Florence in a steep ascent, Leonardo could watch the birds circling in
-the air below him.
-
-On these lofty heights, he would unfold his drawings of flying machines.
-Leonardo had progressed now to a point where an actual flight was all
-that was left. He had designed a sort of flying boat—a shell with wings
-that moved up and down and he had introduced a tail like that of a bird.
-He had noted that the tail of a bird acts as a rudder, a stabilizer and
-a brake when landing.
-
-But Leonardo’s most recent design was one that was called an
-_ornithopter_. It consisted of a wooden frame, two huge wings like a
-bat’s, a series of ropes and pulleys and a windlass, all planned with
-the lightest of materials. The flyer, lying prone in the frame, his feet
-in leather stirrups connected to the wings by pulleys, would move his
-feet up and down to flap the wings while, at the same time, he operated
-the windlass with his arms in order to guide the machine. Soon he hoped
-to build this machine and try it out.
-
-Meanwhile, Leonardo returned to his painting in the council chamber with
-impatience, for spring was approaching and the time to finally realize
-his dream of flying would be at hand. Aside from an assistant who had
-tested the pedals and windlass, no one knew of his plan to actually put
-his machine in the air.
-
- [Illustration: _The_ ornithopter, _one of Leonardo’s designs for a
- “flying machine.” By pumping his feet in the stirrups, the flyer
- could flap the device’s wings._]
-
-Weeks passed and the painting was almost finished. The huge wall was
-covered with plunging horses and embattled soldiers. The colors were
-brilliant on the special mixture he had prepared for the wall—but they
-were not drying as they should have. Something was wrong. To speed the
-drying process, Leonardo had a special fire built in the room that
-directed the heat onto the painting. Spectators were allowed to watch as
-the waves of hot air rose against the wall. Then—disaster began slowly
-with a small trickle of paint from the top! Before anybody could put out
-the fire, the great figures and horses slowly melted down the wall in
-shiny, sticky streaks of color. Leonardo fled the room in an agony of
-shame.
-
-With his own friends discouraged, the Signoria hostile, and the friends
-of Michelangelo triumphant, Leonardo went back to Fiesole. He went back
-with his secret dream of flight. The world would soon forget the Battle
-of Anghiari—but the conquest of the air, if he could achieve it, would
-live forever.
-
-In the spring of 1506, from the slopes of Monte Cecero near Fiesole,
-legend tells us that a great bird sailed into the air and disappeared.
-No one knows whether Leonardo actually flew his machine or not but
-Girolamo Cardano, the son of a friend of Leonardo, wrote, long after
-Leonardo had died, “Leonardo da Vinci also attempted to fly, but he
-failed. He was a fine painter.” Another dream had been shattered.
-
-
-
-
- 11
- _The Return to Milan_
-
-
-Leonardo felt his fifty-four years that spring day in 1506. The
-bitterness of his failures and the frustration of his dreams added
-considerably to the weight of his years. All morning he had wasted in
-argument with Soderini and the Signoria. If it had not been for the
-letter from Charles d’Amboise, Viceroy of the King of France for Milan,
-he would have felt like a beggar. Charles d’Amboise had been appointed
-military governor of Milan by Louis XII ever since the French had
-conquered that city and captured Duke Ludovico Sforza. But the authority
-of the letter had finally won a grudging consent from Soderini. Leonardo
-looked about him to see if he had forgotten anything and slowly climbed
-onto his horse. He nodded to Salai, his apprentice, looked back to see
-if his servant had the pack-horses ready, and started down the street
-leading the small procession. He was going back to Milan.
-
-Leonardo took out the letter and reread it. The words were respectful
-and admiring—and in French. They requested the presence of “Maître
-Leonard de Vinci” at the court of Charles d’Amboise, for purposes of
-painting and other “diverse projects” for the King of France. The letter
-restored a measure of confidence to Leonardo’s self-respect. Before
-Leonardo left, Soderini had made him sign a letter in which Leonardo
-promised to return to Florence within three months and to leave a
-deposit of one hundred and fifty florins which would be held against his
-return. It was signed, notarized and dated May 30, 1506. Nevertheless,
-Leonardo had decided to accept the French envoy’s offer; moreover, he
-looked forward to the prospect of returning to his vineyard at Porta
-Vercellina and the understanding of a sympathetic patron.
-
-Indeed, Charles d’Amboise turned out to be more than sympathetic. He
-recognized Leonardo as a great artist; but even more, he was one of the
-few patrons who could appreciate the magnitude of Leonardo’s scientific
-and mechanical genius. In the court of Charles, Leonardo once more
-enjoyed a time of peace and an assured income. The French
-Vice-Chancellor of Milan, Geffroy Carles, who was second in command, was
-also a distinguished scholar and a patron of the arts and natural
-sciences. With the admiration and support of these two men and
-especially with the distant backing of King Louis XII of France,
-Leonardo’s dismal memories of Florence began to fade.
-
-Leonardo’s three months’ allotted absence from Florence, however, were
-soon past and a letter arrived from Soderini demanding either Leonardo’s
-return or a forfeiture of the one hundred and fifty florins deposit. Now
-a tug-of-war developed between the Viceroy of Milan and the governor of
-Florence over Leonardo. The Signoria reminded Charles that Leonardo had
-his work to complete, while Charles d’Amboise and Geffroy Carles
-demanded an extension of time. One month more was granted. More letters
-were exchanged until the affair became so heated that the King of France
-himself intervened. In January of 1507 the French King informed Soderini
-and the Signoria that Leonardo was “not to move from Milan until our
-arrival.” Since Florence at this time was under the protection of the
-French, such final authority silenced the Signoria. Shortly afterwards
-Leonardo discharged his obligation to the Signoria by relinquishing the
-one hundred and fifty florins, and he at last became free from the
-demands of his native city.
-
-On May 24, 1507 King Louis XII re-entered Milan with all the splendor
-and color that France and the Dukedom of Milan could confer upon their
-ruler. Knights in armor and the ladies of the courts followed the king
-who rode in flowing white and gold under a canopy of blue decorated with
-the lilies of France.
-
-With such pomp and display in Milan, Leonardo was soon back at his old
-occupation of designing pageants and tournaments. While some of the
-people from the days of the Sforzas returned, not many remembered Duke
-Ludovico, who was slowly dying in a French dungeon. Among the people
-that Leonardo now met, there appeared Francesco de’ Melzi, a noble from
-an old Milanese family, who entered Leonardo’s life at this time as a
-pupil. Soon the young man became like a son to Leonardo. Of handsome
-appearance, he had the sensitivity to appreciate the essential
-loneliness of Leonardo and so, almost without realizing it, he filled a
-gap in Leonardo’s life that was to last until the end of his days.
-
-Yet, as Franceso de’ Melzi opened one door of Leonardo’s life another
-door closed. He received word that his beloved uncle Francesco had died
-at Vinci and that he had become the heir to his uncle’s property. No
-sooner had this news been delivered when Leonardo was notified that
-Giuliano, a son of Piero, and now a lawyer in his own right, was
-contesting the will. All the frustrations of his life in Florence now
-rose to an angry pitch and he set out once again for Florence to fight
-for his own rights.
-
-Wisely, Leonardo had armed himself with letters from his new,
-influential patrons and even one from King Louis himself recommending,
-“... we request that you will cause this dispute to be settled in the
-best and briefest delivery of justice....” In August of that same
-year—1507—Charles d’Amboise added his personal letter suggesting that
-the king could not spare Leonardo too long from the court at Milan.
-
-It was with the title of Painter and Engineer to the King of France that
-Leonardo rode back to Florence to await the outcome of the judges in his
-case. He went to stay with a sculptor friend, Giovanni Rustici, a man of
-thirty-five and also an ex-student of Verrochio. They lived in a house
-lent to Rustici by a wealthy scholar and patron named Piero Martelli.
-
-Leonardo soon found that he and Rustici had much in common. Rustici,
-too, collected the odds and ends of his journeys into the country.
-Flying about the house were a tame eagle and a raven, while, at dinner,
-a pet porcupine begged for food. Rustici, however, was a believer in
-alchemy and magic. To practice these arts the young man devoted one room
-to the strange mixtures which bubbled over flames as he attempted to
-change base metals into gold, or to call upon the spirits to predict the
-future.
-
-Leonardo settled into the life of the house very quickly and even helped
-his friend on an important sculpture commission. This was a group
-composition of St. John between the Pharisee and the Levite for over the
-doors of the baptistry. He also started to gather together his scattered
-notes on all the subjects that he had written about, going through them
-making corrections and erasing the repetitions. Possibly Leonardo was
-considering the publication of all his material for he wrote, “Begun at
-Florence in the house of Piero di Braccio Martelli, on the 22nd day of
-March, 1508. This will be a collection without order, made up of many
-sheets which I have copied here, hoping afterwards to arrange them in
-order in their proper places according to the subjects of which they
-treat....” This “collection without order” of almost forty years
-extended into practically all branches of human knowledge, founded on
-years of observation and experiment. Indeed, it was the magnificent
-effort of one extraordinary mind to push back the curtains of ignorance
-in order to let the light of natural truth shine through to mankind.
-
-In addition, Leonardo returned to his studies of anatomy and comparative
-anatomy. For this latter he made many beautiful drawings of the legs of
-animals as compared to those of man. With them, Leonardo tried to
-indicate man’s place in the natural order of the world. He pointed out
-that our physical bodies are basically the same as those of animals, and
-that the muscular and organic differences are those of function only.
-For example, bird and man have the same chest muscles, called the
-pectoralis. But the bird, in order to fly, has developed these into
-powerful instruments of motion. Man, on the other hand, has learned to
-stand and move in an upright position. He has developed the muscles of
-the back, called the erectores spinae, and those of the buttocks to hold
-him erect. Leonardo intended to enlarge upon his studies of comparative
-anatomy to include all living creatures, even the insects.
-
-Meanwhile, the Viceroy of Milan was becoming impatient for Leonardo’s
-return. The judgment against his half-brothers had been settled in
-Leonardo’s favor, and he hastened back to Milan. By the summer of 1508
-he was once more in the routine of the court’s activities. King Louis
-had granted Leonardo a regular allowance and it was the first time he
-had enjoyed such a long freedom from the concerns of earning a living.
-With these steady payments Leonardo now had the leisure and support to
-pursue his own multitude of interests.
-
-As his notes began to take shape and he thought of printing them, it was
-natural for the inventive Leonardo to design his own printing press. It
-is one of the earliest such designs on record. Because the carrying bed
-which held the type and the paper was automatically adjusted to the
-handlebar, the press could be operated by one man. Besides his notes
-Leonardo also considered printing a work by Roger Bacon, the thirteenth
-century English scientist.
-
-This project for printing his own books, however, was never realized by
-Leonardo. Lately, he had received a commission which took him back in
-memory to the days of Ludovico. The subject was Marshal Gian Giacomo
-Trivulzio, a soldier-of-fortune. Originally this man was a loyal
-commander of Galeazzo Sforza’s but when Ludovico came to power he had
-had Trivulzio banished from Milan. Embittered, Trivulzio had become a
-stubborn enemy of Ludovico from that time on, serving under any banner
-that marched against the house of Sforza. A stocky, square-faced man,
-his body was covered with the scars of many battles. He had been
-fighting with the French ever since the time Ludovico had betrayed
-Charles VIII. Trivulzio had seen the great monument that Leonardo had
-modeled and, although it was riddled by French arrows and damaged by
-wind and rain, the Marshal was impressed and wished for a similar
-memorial to himself.
-
-Leonardo set to work immediately. His past experience with the Sforza
-monument was now to his advantage. This time there was no need for
-experimenting. He knew how much material he needed and the approximate
-cost of everything including the casting. He submitted an estimate of
-three thousand and forty—six ducats for the completed work, one hundred
-of which would go to Leonardo. The sum was acceptable to Trivulzio and
-Leonardo began his preliminary studies.
-
-As he gathered the material for this new equestrian statue, Leonardo and
-the French Viceroy Charles d’Amboise became interested in the further
-canalization of the plains of Lombardy. The use of canals and locks had
-been in practice for roughly a hundred years and around Milan there were
-already some fifty miles of canals and about twenty-five locks. Leonardo
-started another survey of the area. In his imagination, he envisioned a
-vast hydraulic engineering project.
-
-On September 12, 1508 Leonardo announced in his notes the beginning of a
-book on the nature of water. He had decided to separate this book from
-the one on hydraulics because it was necessary to separate theory and
-practice. His pages treating the science of hydraulics, or the practical
-applications of water power, had reached to “forty books of benefits.”
-By the spring of 1509 he had expanded his notes on the nature of water
-to include the greatest wave to the smallest raindrop.
-
-Concerning the practical applications of water power, Leonardo put forth
-many designs for new locks. He introduced new methods of raising the
-gates by windlasses and chains which could easily be set in motion by
-one man. But most important is Leonardo’s discovery of the use of
-centrifugal force for draining marshes—the ancestor of the centrifugal
-pump. When you rapidly rotate a stick in a pail of water, the water
-spins in a spiral rising on the sides, and, if you rotate the stick fast
-enough it bares the bottom of the pail. When you remove the stick
-suddenly, the water continues to whirl as it slowly subsides.
-
-This is basically the same principle Leonardo used to raise the water
-from a marsh to a level above the sea so that it could be drained away.
-
-The centrifugal pump was also used with a hydraulic screw which
-converted water power to mechanical power. The force of a stream of
-water was injected into the base of a vertical cylinder. In the base of
-this cylinder was a six-bladed propeller mounted on a vertical shaft.
-The force of the water turned the screw and at the same time the water
-was forced to rise in the cylinder to an outlet above. The turning
-propeller revolved the vertical shaft. This shaft, emerging from the top
-of the cylinder, turned a cogged wheel. This wheel was joined to another
-cogged wheel mounted on a horizontal shaft, thus providing the
-mechanical power. Not only is this the forerunner of the turbine, but
-the use of the propeller, itself, for propulsion in water, was a new
-idea not to be thought of again until the eighteenth century. For
-certain types of hydraulic pumps he conceived of the cone-headed mitre
-valve still in use today.
-
-Leonardo, besides studying the practical applications of water power,
-explored the very nature of water itself. In his proposed books on this
-subject he intended to examine why clouds and fog form, why rain falls
-and the raindrop itself—even how the raindrop is held together. He
-understood the nature of capillary attraction, which holds the raindrop
-together, and his notes show us that he was exploring the science of
-hydrostatics which relates to the pressure and equilibrium of liquids in
-general.
-
-Now that Leonardo had a steady income and the relief from meeting
-painting commissions by fixed dates, he was free to explore his other
-favorite avenues of knowledge. It seemed that his ever-active mind could
-never stop roaming over the whole field of scientific knowledge. He
-continued with his early interests—the nature and movement of air,
-astronomy and geometry. He was also still concerned with movement and
-weight, for he set down in his notes, “The thing which moves will be so
-much the more difficult to stop as it is of greater weight.” This is a
-hint at a principle formulated by Isaac Newton almost two hundred years
-later in his First Law of Motion—the law concerning inertia. For
-example, the motion of an arrow shot into the air maintains itself in
-flight so long as the influence of the initial force is maintained in
-it.
-
- [Illustration: _Da Vinci’s cone-headed mitre valve for use in a
- hydraulic pump._]
-
-On a note dated April 28, 1509 he wrote, “Having for a long time sought
-to square the angle of two curved sides ... I have solved the
-proposition at ten o’clock on the evening of Sunday.” As always,
-Leonardo was deeply involved in the study of mathematics. Too deep
-perhaps to recognize the new rumblings of war.
-
-Louis XII, still pursuing his campaign in northern Italy, had again
-arrived in Milan amid the salutes of the French artillery. Following his
-personal banner of a gold porcupine on a white field, he had come back
-prepared to do battle with the Venetians whose power, as it diminished
-in the east, was extending westward into Italy. Alarmed at this Venetian
-expansion, the French King had allied himself with Pope Julius II and
-the powers of Europe to form the League of Cambrai to push back this
-threat. Charles d’Amboise, the French Viceroy, had already taken to the
-field and at the castle of Cassano, overlooking the Adda river near
-Milan, he awaited the arrival of his king.
-
-By the end of May, Leonardo was in the saddle once more. Surrounded by
-the best knights of France and the nobles of Milan, he personally
-accompanied the French King as military engineer to the meeting with the
-Viceroy of Milan at Cassano.
-
-During the next three months, through the battles and defeat of the
-Venetians at Aquadello where sixteen thousand dead were left on the
-field, and the siege of Caravaggio and the capture of Peschiera,
-Leonardo served as military consultant and map maker. More than ever his
-eye was attracted to the possibilities of utilizing the many rivers they
-crossed both for warfare and commerce. He envisioned making the Adda
-river navigable from Milan to Lake Como. During this time, he devised
-not only a revolving bridge but even one of two layers in a single
-span—the upper level for pedestrians and the lower one for vehicles.
-
-By July, Leonardo had returned with the king and the French army to
-Milan. Here was planned a great celebration of the French victory over
-the Venetians. In front of the cathedral, to the delight of the hundreds
-of spectators, Leonardo devised a mechanical lion scaring a dragon out
-of an artificial lake into the beak of a cock which picked the dragon’s
-eyes out. After the festivities Leonardo returned to his everyday work.
-In time, he had a thriving workshop and as he became more and more
-preoccupied with his scientific explorations, his art commissions were
-turned over to his assistants. He did continue, however, to work on the
-plans for Marshal Trivulzio’s monument and in his preparatory work for
-this assignment he expanded his notes and drawings of comparative
-anatomy.
-
-This renewed interest in anatomy led him to attend a lecture in the
-winter of 1509. The lecturer was Marcantonio della Torre, a young man in
-his late twenties and one of the best-known anatomists of the times. He
-had been a professor at the University of Padua, but this city had
-fallen into the hands of the Venetians. Marcantonio was forced to flee
-Padua and had settled at Pavia. The two men, when they met, recognized
-in each other a devotion to science and they began a professional
-collaboration that grew into a friendship. Leonardo now developed his
-anatomy studies to the point where he is today recognized as the
-foremost medical anatomist of the Renaissance.
-
-Returning to his dissections, Leonardo now proceeded to explore the
-heart and system of veins in the human body. His drawings of the heart
-are nearly perfect. Indeed, he was probably the first to discover the
-endocardium membrane that sheathes the valves and sinews of the heart.
-Also, he pictured and described the moderator band, “the first cause of
-the motion of the heart.” His work on this organ led him to the doorstep
-of discovering the circulation of the blood—later to be carried out by
-William Harvey in the seventeenth century.
-
-Further, Leonardo was the first to accurately draw a representation of
-the _foetus_, or unborn child, in the womb of its mother, writing in his
-notes that, “we conclude therefore, that a single soul governs the
-bodies and nourishes the two.” In addition, he drew a remarkable picture
-of the female figure and for the first time accurately placed her
-organic structure. In his notes, he also pointed the way to the laws
-governing metabolism when he wrote, “The body of anything whatsoever
-that receives nourishment continually dies and is continually
-renewed....” By pouring wax into a hole in the skull he made the first
-casts of the ventricles of the brain. Several hundred years were to pass
-before this method was rediscovered.
-
-As Leonardo’s work progressed, his admiration for the complexity of the
-human body grew. Many times in the middle of explaining a section of
-anatomy he inserted a sentence or two of wonder or praise at the
-magnificent creation that is the human being. Indeed, these drawings and
-notes represent the sum of many, many dissections; moreover, Leonardo
-had to work under conditions that placed many obstacles in his path—the
-crude lights and instruments, the difficulties of obtaining corpses and,
-above all, the opposition of the superstitious and ignorant.
-
-The following year Leonardo entered in his notes, “This winter of the
-year 1510 I look to finish all this anatomy.” And yet, however sincerely
-he might express such a wish, Leonardo was a person who was literally
-never “finished.” The scientific and artistic tasks he had chosen for
-himself were clearly beyond the limits of any one man. Besides, the
-pressures of the outside world were once more threatening the peace and
-quiet of his home and work.
-
-Pope Julius II became increasingly fearful of the French victories over
-the Venetians. Secretly, he concluded a peace with Venice and, allying
-himself with his former enemy, he now turned against the French. When
-the conflict continued, Charles d’Amboise, the patron of Leonardo, was
-killed at the battle of Correggio. He was replaced by a new French
-Viceroy, Gaston de Foix. Although the Pope now hired Swiss mercenaries,
-this invasion from the North was defeated by the young Gaston. Not to be
-outdone, the Pope then brought in Spanish troops.
-
-In the ensuing bloody battle at Ravenna, the French completely defeated
-the armies of the Pope and Spain, despite their use of battle-cars armed
-with razor-sharp sickles on their wheels—strangely like the early
-inventions that Leonardo designed for Lorenzo de’ Medici! Although the
-French were victorious, they lost their brilliant young leader, Gaston
-de Foix, and with him they lost their heart. As a result, they were soon
-disorganized. The Pope’s armies renewed their attacks, and the French
-began a long retreat.
-
-Once again the plague infested Milan and Leonardo’s friend, Marcantonio
-della Torre, died of it. After some futile attempts at recovery, the
-French fled across the Alps and with them went Marshal Trivulzio. Milan
-was left temporarily under the martial rule of the Swiss, and Leonardo
-with only his few apprentices was left again without a patron.
-
-Tired and prematurely old at sixty-one, Leonardo resignedly gathered his
-possessions together once more and with Francesco de’ Melzi and four of
-his loyal pupils, he turned his back on Milan for the last time. The
-date was September 29, 1513. Their destination was Rome.
-
-
-
-
- 12
- _Rome_
-
-
-“Name?”
-
-“Leonardo da Vinci.”
-
-“Where from and where are you staying?”
-
-“We are coming from Milan by way of Florence. I have quarters being
-prepared for me at the Belvedere in the Vatican—by order of the Pope.
-Now, young man, let us pass.”
-
-The guard at the Porta del Popolo changed his manner. He dropped his
-halberd and motioned to the other guards to let the riders through. He
-touched his helmet roughly and with a grin he said,
-
-“I’m sorry, Sire—but you know how it is. All these people—there’s bound
-to be them that we don’t want here. Go ahead, your Excellency. Make way
-there!”
-
-With these words he laid his spear against a jostling group of
-broad-hatted pilgrims blocking the entrance to the city of Rome.
-
-Leonardo heeled his horse and with Francesco de’ Melzi at his side,
-followed by his servant and students, pushed past the crowd at the gate.
-To the left rose the Pincio hill with its stately pines where, in the
-days of Imperial Rome, Lucullus had walked in his gardens. But Leonardo
-had no time to look about. It was a damp December day, and rain
-threatened from the gray skies. He was tired, and as Francesco glanced
-at him he could see Leonardo pull his cape around him with a little
-shiver as the chill wind stirred the long, graying hair on his
-shoulders. They made their way through the crowded, noisy city. They
-crossed the Tiber and rode past Castel’ Sant’ Angelo, the papal fortress
-built on the tomb of Emperor Hadrian. After another inspection by the
-Swiss guards in beribboned uniforms of white, green and gold under their
-shining breastplates, they entered the walls of the Vatican. That
-evening after he had settled himself in the Belvedere apartments and
-dinner had been eaten, Leonardo, gazing into the embers of the fire,
-looked back over his new stroke of fortune.
-
-The Medicis had returned to power. Pope Julius II had died, and Giovanni
-de’ Medici, son of Lorenzo, had become Pope Leo X at the age of
-thirty-seven. With his election to the head of the Christian world, the
-Republic of Florence became a city of the Medicis once more and Leonardo
-had received an appointment in Rome. Giuliano de’ Medici, Pope Leo’s
-favorite younger brother, in his new rise to power and wealth, became
-Leonardo’s patron. The two must have met sometime during the Medici’s
-exile. Leonardo was given the apartments in the Vatican and a salary of
-thirty-three ducats (approximately eighty-five dollars) a month and a
-workshop was fitted for him and his pupils. He was also assigned an
-exclusive German assistant named Georg.
-
-The Pope’s court in the Vatican was like the Medici court in the
-Florence of Leonardo’s youth—multiplied by hundreds. Leo X saw himself
-as the center of the artistic world, and being a man of luxurious tastes
-with the wealth of the church behind him, the Vatican was soon filled
-with a mixture of the wise and foolish. Pompous classic-quoters,
-third-rate poets and clowns mixed with the world’s scholars and
-statesmen. The two greatest artists were Bramante, the architect and
-friend of Leonardo’s first years in Milan, and Bramante’s pupil Raphael,
-the painter.
-
-Bramante was busy building the new church of St. Peter’s and, as the
-architect of this favorite project of the Popes, he was sole master of
-the Roman art world. Raphael, as his protege, was the recipient of the
-better painting commissions in Rome. The elderly Bramante and the
-thirty-year-old assistant were a famous pair in the Rome of 1513.
-Equally as famous, however, was Michelangelo; he was still living in
-Rome, but was without patronage after Julius II’s death. Leonardo’s old
-rival had scored his triumph with his extraordinary paintings in the
-Sistine Chapel.
-
-Although the young Raphael, who owed so much to the example of Leonardo,
-now rode through the streets as a wealthy nobleman, Leonardo himself
-received no great commissions. While Pope Leo was indulgent of his
-brother’s whims he himself had no use for this tall, serious old man who
-roamed the shaded walks of the Vatican poking at the strange plants in
-the botanical garden or making drawings of the foreign animals in the
-private zoo. In reality, Leonardo’s patron, Giuliano de’ Medici was a
-weak man. He played at being a patron but, like his brother the Pope, he
-lacked the force and decision of his famous father Lorenzo.
-Nevertheless, he did give Leonardo one small commission for a picture.
-Immediately Leonardo, excited by the exotic plants in the Vatican
-gardens, commenced to experiment with them to find a resin to make a
-varnish with which to cover the future painting. Pope Leo made fun of
-him exclaiming, to the delight of his court, “This man will never get
-anything done, he thinks of the end before the beginning.”
-
-This ridicule by the Pope made Leonardo a joke to many in the circles of
-the Vatican who were a little afraid of this strange man with the
-searching eyes. Leonardo also suffered the humiliations of a man who did
-not conform to the fashions of his day. His knowledge of Latin, for
-example, was weak and although he could read it with the help of a
-dictionary he could not speak it. And, among the people who surrounded
-the Pope, Latin was the only language allowed. Prizes of great sums of
-money and important positions were often granted on the strength of an
-improvised speech in Latin (with many quotations from the classical
-authors) or a flattering Latin verse. Faced with such setbacks and
-ridicule, Leonardo—not surprisingly—began to withdraw into himself.
-
-And yet, Leonardo refused to remain idle—he had to work. The need for
-mirrors in the vast halls and rooms of the papal palace was great.
-Leonardo turned his mechanical skill to redesigning and improving
-methods of making them, and even inventing his own machines for the
-grinding of the glass. Also, for Giuliano, who dabbled in alchemy and
-magic, he made distorting mirrors and burning lenses. In addition,
-Leonardo invented a machine which could be run hydraulically for
-producing long strips of copper of equal width for use in soldering the
-mirrors.
-
-But, with the making of these mirrors, Leonardo began to run into
-trouble with his German assistant, Georg. The boy was a loafer; he spoke
-little Italian and took every opportunity to spend his days with his
-countrymen in the Swiss guard. Leonardo tried to alter the situation by
-suggesting that the boy have his meals with him at his worktable, thus
-giving Georg a better chance to learn the language. This however did not
-appeal to him. Then, because Leonardo’s inventions were so
-extraordinary, he began to give away the secrets of their mechanisms to
-Johannes the mirror-maker, another German, who had been replaced by
-Leonardo in the favors of Giuliano. This naturally made Johannes jealous
-of Leonardo. Georg gossiped, too, and told stories about the old,
-eccentric man who lived like a miser in the midst of all the luxury and
-who drew crazy circles on pages of paper.
-
-These “crazy circles” were geometric exercises that had fascinated
-Leonardo from the time he had wandered across Italy with Fra Luca
-Pacioli. Pacioli’s book _De Divina Proportione_, containing sixty
-illustrations from designs of Leonardo, had been published in Venice in
-1509. Leonardo intended to entitle these geometric exercises _De Ludo
-Geometrico_. In geometry a lune is a crescent-shaped figure bounded by
-two intersecting arcs of circles on a plane or a sphere. Leonardo drew
-pages of these lunes and then proceeded to transform their curvilinear
-figures into squares of equal area. He also reviewed Archimedes’ method
-of squaring a circle and developed it into a variety of ways for cubing
-spheres and cylinders.
-
-He returned as well to formulating theories of friction. He wrote in his
-notes, “the tallest wheel is the easiest to pull”—for example, a big
-wheel turning at the same speed as a smaller one has less friction to
-overcome because it makes less revolutions. His experiments in friction
-predated men like Amontons and Coulomb by two and three centuries. He
-established a formula for the building arch which he described as “a
-strength caused by two weaknesses”—if one half of an arch is removed,
-the other half collapses. They support and give strength to each other.
-In addition, Leonardo determined, before Galileo, the center of gravity
-of any pyramid and of a tetrahedral, or four-sided body.
-
-As the days went by and he waited for commissions to come, Leonardo took
-to wandering about the streets of Rome. He stood in the half-buried
-Forum of the Caesars surrounded by grazing sheep and grunting pigs.
-Wooden shacks where crude cartwheels were made and where the marble from
-the ancient temples was cut and sold, were built against the sides of
-crumbling ruins. The old triumphal arches, now overgrown with creepers,
-were boarded into towers and cattle were penned between the shafts of
-columns that once supported the grandeur of temple roofs. Here and there
-a classical scholar would be sketching or writing from the worn, Latin
-inscriptions on a marble slab tilted crazily from the ground where it
-had fallen hundreds of years ago. Goats wandered on the Palatine hill,
-once the home of Emperors, and the great baths of the Emperor Diocletian
-were now a deer park and a hunting ground for royalty.
-
-During the course of these wanderings, Leonardo became interested in the
-primitive methods of carpentry. Such things as screws, for example, were
-rare. Those that were used were either made of wood or, if of metal, by
-goldsmiths laboriously making each one by hand, soldering wire around a
-pin and another wire into the hole to hold the screw. Sometimes they
-were made by filing pieces of metal individually. All these methods were
-time-consuming and costly.
-
-Leonardo had thought of this problem before, and now he concentrated on
-perfecting his ideas about it. Previously, he had thought of casting the
-metal in wooden molds and then turning the metal on thread-cutters. The
-designs he finally drew in careful detail, however, are essentially the
-methods used today. The new machines did with a few turns of a handle
-and adjustments of a few cogged wheels what it took one man many hours
-to perform. He also drew designs for a mechanical plane and a machine
-for drawing wire that worked by water power.
-
-Leonardo now lived and worked in the Belvedere of the Vatican—more a man
-on exhibition than an active participant in the great artistic
-activities taking place around him. True, he received his thirty-three
-ducats a month, but Michelangelo had been paid three thousand for his
-work in the Sistine Chapel, while Raphael had earned twelve thousand for
-each room he painted in the Vatican.
-
- [Illustration: _Leonardo became interested in various methods of
- carpentry._]
-
-Thus Leonardo drifted farther and farther away from his painting. This,
-in itself, caused people to talk in the papal city. For he had earned
-fame as a painter, but his passion for science was regarded as strange
-and whimsical. Occasionally, he did receive a small commission from the
-workshop of Raphael, yet these were like the crumbs from a rich man’s
-table.
-
-Even the toys Leonardo made at this period for the amusement of his
-patrons were looked upon as somewhat weird. For example, he would take
-small pieces of wax and mold them into strange little animals and then
-inflate them so that they floated in the air in front of a startled
-guest. Once he caught a curious lizard in the garden and spent hours
-putting scales all over the tiny body, attached to it a little beard and
-horns, then let it out from a box at a banquet. The guests jumped back
-with fear and the women became hysterical.
-
-One of Leonardo’s jokes that has been passed down in accounts of his
-life at this period must have created quite a sensation. He showed the
-company the cleaned entrails of a sheep resting on the palm of his hand.
-After telling them to wait and watch he took the entrails in another
-room and with a bellows inflated them with warm air. As the entrails
-filled with air they expanded and extended. They crept into the room
-where the company waited. Slowly they grew and grew until they began to
-fill the room. The guests overturned their chairs in their hurry to get
-out of the way of this shapeless, translucent creature. Then Leonardo
-appeared, the air-filled entrails giving way before him, and said:
-
-“Sires, this is but an example and symbol of virtue. As you can see, the
-smallest virtue is capable of the greatest growth.”
-
-The guests laughed, but it was an uncomfortable laugh. Thus another
-story was added to the legend of Leonardo as an odd old man.
-
-Leonardo, whose work—particularly his anatomical studies—had constantly
-been interrupted by the fortunes of war, had found another hospital in
-Rome where he could continue these studies. This time it was his
-intention to write a treatise on speech. He dissected and drew the
-anatomy of the larynx (the voice box), the vocal cords and the trachea
-(the air passage to the lungs), and all the muscles that control the
-movements of the tongue and the lips. If you pronounce each letter of
-the alphabet you will feel these muscles of the lips, especially with
-the letters “o,” “p,” and “f.” Carefully he noted how the air vibrations
-from the trachea form themselves into vowels and consonants, and he drew
-the membrane which, when air is pressed against it, makes the sound
-“aah.”
-
-At this same time he was also busy finishing a treatise on painting
-which he had begun when he was working on the “Last Supper” for Ludovico
-Sforza. But it was for his knowledge of military engineering that he was
-sent to the city of Parma by the Pope on September 25, 1514. Here he
-stayed at the Bell Inn while examining the fortifications and other
-defenses of the city.
-
-Leonardo’s patron, Giuliano de’ Medici, had been appointed governor of
-this particular area and, since Pope Leo X was fearful of two powerful
-countries, France and Spain, he was preparing the papal territory
-against possible invasion. Another fear of the Pope—and indeed of
-everybody in Rome—was malaria, the disease carried by the mosquitoes
-that bred in the Pontine marshes west and southwest of the city. At that
-time, however, no one knew the cause was mosquitoes; rather, they
-thought it was the bad air from the marshes.
-
-As Leonardo had already been effective in draining the pestilential
-marshes of Piombino for Cesare Borgia and, later, those around Milan for
-Charles d’Amboise, he was assigned the same task for the Pontine
-marshes. He surveyed the entire area to the sea and made another
-extraordinary aerial type map. His recommendations included draining the
-entire area, enlarging and regulating the Martino river and cutting an
-extra outlet from the river Livoli to the sea. These plans were adopted
-some years later and parts of the marshes were drained successfully,
-yielding new land for the cultivation of crops.
-
-By December of 1514 Leonardo had finished his treatise on speech and,
-possibly in an effort to attract the attention of the Pope, he submitted
-it to the Privy-Chamberlain, Battista dell’Aquila. As Pope Leo was
-surrounded by an army of secretaries and assistants who passed on
-everything submitted, this manuscript with its beautiful drawings was
-mislaid and lost and only a few notes and sketches remain.
-
-The continual discouragement of his life in Rome was offset by a visit
-from his half-brother, Giuliano, around Christmas. Leonardo was held in
-esteem by his family despite the quarrel over his father’s and his uncle
-Francesco’s will, and his half-brothers were pleased to tell of their
-famous relative who lived in the Belvedere as guest of the Medicis. Yet
-they knew little of Leonardo’s scientific dreams and his lack of
-recognition in the papal city.
-
-Often, Leonardo’s greatest comfort was to return to his notes. The
-challenge of geometry and the mysteries of the movement of air and water
-kept him from brooding about his lonely life. Francesco de’ Melzi,
-Leonardo’s young friend, had more and more taken over the practical
-responsibilities of his everyday life. Except for his workshop, where
-the troublesome Georg worked at the making of mirrors, and an occasional
-small commission for a painting, Leonardo was free to study.
-
-In addition to his geometrical investigations, Leonardo now experimented
-with the science of _statics_ (objects that are stationary), and
-_dynamics_ (objects in motion). One of his most important discoveries in
-the science of mechanics came about during this period. Concerning the
-division of weight, he wrote, “There are three conditions of gravity of
-which the one is its simple natural gravity, the second is its
-accidental gravity, the third the friction produced by it. But the
-natural weight is in itself unchangeable, the accidental which is joined
-to it is of infinite force, and the friction varies according to the
-places wherein it occurs, namely rough or smooth places.” Thus he
-realized and formulated what composes the movement of an object. He
-found that movement is the result of separate forces acting upon the
-object from different directions, as for example, the initial push, the
-pull of gravity and the resistance of friction. And, before Galileo,
-Leonardo further experimented with objects dropped from a height. As the
-result of repeated experiments, he noted that the fall was being
-affected by the earth’s rotation. That is, the object dropped always
-fell in a slight eastward direction rather than vertically downward—a
-fact later proved conclusively by Isaac Newton and Robert Hooke in the
-next century.
-
-He also became fascinated with spiral motion, such as is found in a
-spinning top or in a whirlpool of water. Because of his interest in
-_hydrodynamics_, or the movement of water, he began to sketch imaginary
-“Deluge compositions.” These were drawings showing the world—probably
-inspired by the Bible—in a chaos of wind and floods. They were based on
-his years of scientific research. Indeed, his drawings of actual
-whirlpools are still among the greatest of his scientific art. Today,
-with all the latest technical aids, such as dusting a whirlpool with
-powdered rosin and then photographing it, an accurate three-dimensional
-picture is impossible. Yet Leonardo, by sheer observation and analysis
-coupled with his genius for drawing, could reproduce the complicated
-shape of whirling water.
-
-In the relatedness of his explorations of water, air and movement, and
-weight, he worked out the similarity between the laws of equilibrium
-controlling solids and liquids. The equation between the motive force
-and resistance that makes for equilibrium or balance in solids can be
-compared to the equation between the upward pressure of liquids and the
-downward pressure exerted on them.
-
-Far into the night Leonardo worked on his papers. He tired more easily
-now, and his eyes had grown weaker. To provide the increase in light
-that his failing eyesight demanded, he had improved on his original oil
-lamp by making the wick rise as the oil was burned away, and he had
-extra lamps fitted to the ceiling.
-
-On January 9, 1515 Leonardo wrote in his notes, “Il Magnifico Giuliano
-de’ Medici set out on the ninth day of January 1515 at daybreak from
-Rome, to go and marry a wife in Savoy. And on that day came the news of
-the death of the King of France (Louis XII).” This meant that his new
-patron had left and his old patron had died. Leonardo’s note was a sad
-one and perhaps he felt, in the departure of his patron, more alone than
-ever in the crowded life of the Vatican. Giuliano, on the urging of his
-brother, was marrying Philiberta of Savoy, in an effort to strengthen
-the prestige of the Medici. Louis XII, before he died, had formed a
-league against Spain, and with the marriage of the Pope’s brother to a
-noble house of France, the league would be strengthened by keeping the
-Pope on the side of France. Actually Pope Leo was playing both sides,
-for at the time he was also friendly with Spain.
-
-
-Shortly after Giuliano’s departure from Rome, Leonardo fell ill,
-presumably from a mild heart attack complicated by a touch of malarial
-fever. The doctor had been called. It was a warning, the doctor told
-Francesco de’ Melzi, and Leonardo must remain quiet for quite awhile.
-
-By the end of the winter Leonardo was back on his feet and apparently
-feeling completely well again. Giuliano himself had fallen ill about the
-same time and the news that he had recovered and was finally returning
-to Rome cheered Leonardo. He sat down and wrote a long letter to his
-patron expressing his joy. This letter also included a long list of
-complaints against Georg and Johannes. Georg was now using his room in
-Leonardo’s apartment to do work for others. He lied to Leonardo and flew
-into such a rage when he was questioned that no one could go near him.
-Moreover, Johannes, the mirror-maker, was now moving back into the
-Vatican and turning out mirrors for everyone, even using Georg’s room as
-his own workroom. Johannes boasted of his skill and told everybody that
-Leonardo did not know what he was doing. Thus, it was not surprising
-that Leonardo, in his long complaint, was taking out the anger and
-frustration he felt against all the injustices of his life in Rome.
-
-But by summer Leonardo was again employed as a military engineer.
-Francis I had succeeded to the throne of France. The new French King was
-anxious to secure his lost title to the Dukedom of Milan and was
-preparing another invasion of Italy. Pope Leo X, still trying to play
-both sides at once, was making secret agreements with Francis while at
-the same time joining the King of Spain, Milan, Genoa, and the Swiss in
-an alliance against France. Consequently, he sent Leonardo out to
-inspect the fortifications of Civitavecchia, a city on the Tyrrhenian
-coast not too far from Rome. When, in August, Francis I crossed into
-Italy with an army of thirty-five thousand men including Marshal
-Trivulzio, the Pope ordered his brother, Giuliano, to take command of
-the papal forces. On the way to assume this command, Giuliano fell ill
-and collapsed. His sickness this time was soon to be fatal.
-
-Leonardo returned to Rome with his survey of Civitavecchia, where he
-immediately learned of his patron’s latest illness. Perhaps realizing
-that Giuliano was fatally ill, Leonardo made a desperate effort to gain
-the recognition he felt should be his. He entered the competition for a
-new façade of San Lorenzo in Florence. Among the other competitors was
-Michelangelo, his younger and yet oldest rival.
-
-In October of 1515, Francis I had recaptured Milan and by Christmas was
-in Rome. Leonardo may have met the new King of France in Bologna where
-Pope Leo X had personally traveled in order to settle a peace treaty
-with France. Certainly it is known that he attended Francis’ court in
-Rome. Leonardo’s name was well respected in French circles and, as
-Francis had already admired the pictures by Leonardo, the meeting was a
-happy occasion for them both. Indeed, the recognition that Leonardo had
-sought in his native land was never as great as that accorded to him by
-the French.
-
-As Francis I prepared to leave for France in January he must have
-offered Leonardo a position at his court. While he still hoped that
-Giuliano de’ Medici would recover from his illness and return to Rome,
-Francis’ offer gave him support in the knowledge that he had a powerful,
-new friend.
-
-March of 1516 brought the first of three events that were to change the
-course of Leonardo’s last years. Giuliano de’ Medici died, leaving
-Leonardo not only without a patron, but without a friend in the Vatican.
-Now sixty-four years old, he was reluctant to leave his comfortable
-quarters in the Belvedere with its workshop and pleasant gardens.
-Besides, deep within himself, he felt that Rome could still offer him
-the fame that had always escaped him.
-
-Spring ripened into summer and the second event occurred. The
-competition for the new façade of San Lorenzo in Florence was won by
-Michelangelo. To Leonardo the news was a blow. The success of his old
-rival weakened his position in the Vatican even further and added to the
-growing hostility he had felt in the people surrounding the Pope.
-
-The third event was the sum of many small events. Georg and his friend
-Johannes, in their jealousy, had spread much gossip about Leonardo in
-court circles. They now took advantage of Giuliano’s death to circulate
-stories about Leonardo’s dissections of bodies in the hospital. These
-were added to vicious gossip that Leonardo was pro-French. This news
-eventually reached Pope Leo X. The Pope himself was perfectly aware of
-the practice of dissection and, personally, he had turned his eyes the
-other way. However, as dissection was contrary to Church doctrine, an
-official complaint to the head of the Church could not be ignored. The
-Pope used it as an excuse to be rid of this tiresome old man whom he had
-tolerated only for his brother’s sake. Leonardo was abandoned.
-
-The year 1516 was drawing to a close. Leonardo had decided to seek the
-patronage offered him by Francis I. So he and Francesco de’ Melzi, his
-loyal young friend, left Rome for the long journey into France. As he
-left his native land for the last time, Leonardo looked back over his
-years—from the silver lute that had sent him to Milan, to the death of
-Giuliano, to the final rejection of Pope Leo X. Remembering how Lorenzo
-de’ Medici had sent him to Ludovico so many years before, Leonardo
-thought to himself with great sadness, “The Medici created and destroyed
-me.”
-
-
-
-
- 13
- _The Last Years_
-
-
-Leonardo looked around from where he was leaning on the parapet of the
-Chateau d’Amboise to watch a group of young lords and ladies playing
-croquet on the emerald-green lawn. The click of the mallets and balls
-was mingled with the shouts and laughter of the young people. It was
-late afternoon in May and although the sun was warm the breeze from the
-west was chilly. Leonardo looked down again from the sheer height of the
-castle wall across the wide sweep of the Loire river and the valley
-extending as far as the eye could see. Swallows were swooping low over
-the banks below and the wind carried their shrilling cries up to him.
-The forested islands and sandbars interrupted the steady flow of the
-river and Leonardo could see the reflections sway in the current. He had
-been studying the river but he realized that his aging eyes were not up
-to the task of concentrating for long. The wind made them water, so he
-turned away and started back to his home.
-
-There was much that was familiar in the castle at Amboise. The thick,
-high walls and round towers and especially the graceful, lacy spires of
-the king’s residence brought back much that he had known in his native
-land. The gardens had been planted by Italians—there were orange trees
-and even a mulberry tree from his beloved plains of Lombardy. The king’s
-residence and chapel had been constructed and the decorations carved in
-stone by Italian artisans. Leonardo could stop and talk in his native
-tongue with many of the men employed by the king. Since the time of
-Charles VIII, the French had brought in the latest Renaissance styles
-from Italy. Leonardo’s steps took him back from the castle grounds and
-down a path with a hand-railing. The steep roofs of the town of Amboise
-with their chimneys could be seen below him. The path led to a small
-manor house, like a miniature castle with sharp spires and lacy,
-carved-stone gables that was set in green lawns and gravel paths.
-
-The Manoir de Cloux, as Leonardo’s house was called, had been a hunting
-lodge for Francis I, but when Leonardo had arrived he gave the house to
-Leonardo for his home. Francis, in his admiration for this great man,
-also gave him seven hundred crowns a year, together with a pension of
-four hundred for Francesco de’ Melzi.
-
- [Illustration: _Leonardo at Chateau d’Amboise on the Loire._]
-
-The long journey from Rome had left Leonardo tired and weak and he had
-fallen ill again shortly after his arrival. This time the attack was
-more serious and had left him with his right hand permanently crippled.
-He looked at it now as he opened the door to his room. “Another
-warning,” he thought, “and there’s still so much to do.”
-
-The young, robust King Francis was everywhere at once. He gloried in
-knightly tournaments, hunts, and sports of all kinds. Always restless,
-he might appear at any place unannounced. Frequently there would be a
-clamor at the gates of Leonardo’s home and the king would ride in with
-one or two of his nobles. With a great jingling of spurs he would bound
-up the stairs of the manor house calling for Leonardo. He delighted in
-long talks with the old man, and would listen respectfully as Leonardo,
-his deep-set eyes brooding over his notes, would demonstrate some
-scientific point on a blank sheet of paper.
-
-At this time, Leonardo was engaged on three projects which demanded his
-immediate attention. One was the entertainment for a banquet that
-Francis was giving for his sister, Marguerite de Valois, and her
-husband. Another was a new design for the king’s castle at Amboise, and
-the third was a design for making a navigable waterway from Amboise to
-Romorantin. Although these three projects were the main ones that
-occupied Leonardo’s time, there was always the supervising of his
-pupils’ painting on the walls in the little chapel of the manor house,
-his own work on a painting of St. John the Baptist, and the continual
-ordering and revising of his notes.
-
-The banquet took place in October of 1517, and the mechanical lion
-Leonardo had made was an immediate success. It “walked” by means of a
-spring motor, into the hall, opening and closing its fierce mouth while
-swaying its head from side to side. With a wand that he had been given,
-Francis I stepped down from his seat and tapped the lion three times.
-The toy fell apart and from it a cascade of white lilies poured out at
-the king’s feet.
-
-Also at this time there was a distinguished guest at the castle of
-Amboise. He was a fellow-countryman of Leonardo and his name was
-Cardinal Luigi d’Aragona. With him was his secretary Antonio de’ Beatis.
-As Leonardo was now a famous member of King Francis’ court, the cardinal
-paid him a visit accompanied by Antonio. The extraordinary anatomy
-drawings and all his notes were shown to the cardinal; he and his
-secretary were deeply impressed. They were also surprised to learn that
-Leonardo had never been accorded the same recognition by his own
-countrymen. Antonio de’ Beatis wrote home that “This gentleman has
-written a treatise on anatomy, showing by illustrations the members,
-muscles, nerves, veins, joints, intestines and whatever else is to
-discuss in the bodies of men and women, in a way that has never yet been
-done by anyone else. All this we have seen with our own eyes; and he
-said that he had dissected more than thirty bodies, both of men and
-women of all ages. He has also written of the nature of water, and of
-divers machines, and of other matters which he has set down in an
-endless number of volumes, all in the vulgar tongue [meaning Italian not
-Latin], which, if they be published, will be profitable and delightful.”
-
-By now Leonardo had accumulated thousands of pages of notes, and they
-lay stacked in all manner of chests and boxes. Often now, as Leonardo
-surveyed the work of his lifetime, he realized that he would never see
-the day of their publication. Time was slipping through his fingers.
-Already summer had come and gone and now the sharp winds of fall were
-lifting the leaves from the ground in dancing whirls. Fortunately these
-were years of peace and for the first time in a long while the people
-were free of wars. The scheme to canalize the waterway to Romorantin had
-grown to a vast idea for making a thoroughfare of water from the Loire
-river all the way down France to Lyons and then into Italy! Leonardo,
-old and ailing as he was, had surveyed parts of the rivers Loire and
-Cher, braving the rough roads and crude accommodations.
-
-In addition, Leonardo had designed a castle for Francis I’s widowed
-mother in Romorantin. This castle was never built, but many of the ideas
-that Leonardo had incorporated in its design were used in the gigantic
-and magnificent castle of Chambord. Also, at Francis’ request, he had
-reviewed the work being done at the castle in Blois and there is reason
-to think that the beautiful outside stairwell that spirals from left to
-right might have been designed by Leonardo.
-
-In February of 1517, a son had been born to Queen Claude and Francis I.
-The king decided to postpone the baptism of the dauphin (the title given
-to the eldest son of a French King) until May of the following year. At
-that time there would be a double celebration at Amboise, for a nephew
-of Pope Leo X, the young Lorenzo de’ Medici, was being married to
-Madelaine d’Auvergne. As usual, Leonardo was given the assignment of
-preparing the festivities. Although he was fond of preparing these
-entertainments, Leonardo now felt the pressure of time; for indeed, the
-interruptions of this eager young king were sometimes a hardship. He
-felt that his years were drawing to an end. His notes were unfinished
-and his dreams of extending man’s knowledge of his world and of himself
-were hindered not only by such petty chores but also by the limits of
-his own physical endurance.
-
-As Leonardo was sketching one day from the window of his room where he
-could see the castle walls and the chapel of Saint-Hubert, he set aside
-the drawing for a moment to write a memorandum to himself. “Write of the
-quality of time as distinct from its mathematical divisions.” Was this
-extraordinary man sensing the road down which Einstein—in his studies of
-relativity—was to travel hundreds of years later?
-
-Spring arrived again and with it came the first wild flowers and roses,
-the songs of the birds in the woods and the blossoming of the chestnut
-trees. The time for the double celebration came, too, and Leonardo was
-seen busily preparing the decorations and mechanical delights for the
-large crowds already assembling. In addition to the tournaments-at-arms
-that so delighted the king, there was to be a mock battle with a
-besieged city, and for this Leonardo had had constructed imposing castle
-walls of wood with a backdrop of a city’s spires and towers. The party
-lasted for weeks, and the climax was performed on the lawns of
-Leonardo’s house where a great ballroom had been set up. Here he
-repeated an earlier success, the one that had so enchanted Ludovico’s
-guests so many years ago in the Sforza castle at Milan. There was again
-a dome over the ballroom across which the stars moved mechanically and
-artificial figures representing various gods and goddesses spoke and
-sang by means of a hidden choir, while the sun and moon shone in their
-own lights.
-
-This display ended the festivities. It was already late June and
-Leonardo was anxious to return to his plans for the water route to
-Italy. There was the area near Sologne which, when flooded, would make
-the surrounding countryside a marshland. This would have to be drained
-by the same method as he had planned for the Piombino and the Pontine
-marshes. Francis I was interested, too, in the improvements Leonardo had
-suggested for his own castle, and he would have to talk with the castle
-superintendent about them. As always, there seemed to be so many things
-to do, to plan, to work on. Then Leonardo wrote in his notes: “On the
-24th of June, the day of St. John, 1518, at Amboise, in the palace of
-Cloux....” and underneath, “I will continue—”
-
-“_I will continue_—” It was almost a note of defiance against the
-obstacles of advancing age and sickness and the interruptions of the
-practical world.
-
-
-The sound of jingling spurs and bridle chains and the snorting of many
-horses announced another surprise visit from the young king. Leonardo
-could hear him below shouting something to Battista, the servant who had
-come to Amboise with Leonardo. Now, as usual, Francis was running up the
-stairs with all the energy of youth shouting for “le maître” (the
-master). Resignedly and with patient humor, Leonardo stepped out to
-greet the king. The gold chains around Francis’ thick neck and over his
-broad chest glinted in the semi-light of the hall, and he was holding
-his plumed hat at his side and mopping his forehead with a dainty
-embroidered handkerchief.
-
-“Master Leonardo! We are going on a tour of the river and I want you to
-look at the place that I told you about. Where I want to put that
-bridge. You remember?”
-
-“Sire, give me but a moment to gather some material together.”
-
-A chest was made ready and soon Leonardo was at the door, calling to
-Francesco and Battista to help him into the saddle of his horse, while
-the king’s servants hoisted the chest onto one of the carts already
-piled high with tents and provisions.
-
-When Francis was restless—which was often—a “tour” could mean many hours
-or many days of travel. Wagons were always kept ready with all the
-equipment for a long journey and Leonardo, himself, had learned to
-accept these sudden whims and kept chests of his own ready for any such
-trip. Now, as always, the king kept his horse reined back out of regard
-for this tall, stooped man with the long beard and simple clothes.
-
-Yet when Leonardo returned from this “tour” he realized that he could no
-longer make such trips. The hardships of sleeping in tents, riding over
-the hot roads, and the necessary work involved in surveying the possible
-sites for a bridge had left him almost exhausted. He had made one
-suggestion, however, and that was to build houses that could be carried
-and then assembled with a few wooden locking devices, then just as
-quickly taken down and moved to the next place. They could also be left
-standing where the country people could use them while the court was
-away. Indeed, such structures would seem to be the ancestors of our own
-prefabricated houses.
-
-The winter of 1519 was a bitter one. When the cold fog spread over the
-valley shrouding the bare trees it chilled the big, white-washed rooms
-of Cloux. The wind blew down from the north sending blasts down the
-chimneys and scattering ashes and sparks. Leonardo, huddled against the
-huge fireplace with its roof projecting into the room, pulled his black
-cloak lined in soft leather around him and reminded himself to include
-it in his will for Mathurine, the faithful domestic who cooked for him
-and took care of his house.
-
-The aged Leonardo, who had observed and analyzed so much of man and
-nature, knew now that his own days were numbered. When the first, pale
-sunlight of March shone through the small leaded-glass windows of his
-house, he applied to the king for permission to make out his own will.
-French law demanded that the property of any foreigner dying in France
-went to the Crown. The permission was granted, and on April 23, 1519,
-Guillaume Boureau, the Royal Notary of Amboise was summoned with
-witnesses.
-
-To his half-brothers in Florence Leonardo left his property at Fiesole
-and four hundred ducats. To his faithful friend and companion, Francesco
-de’ Melzi, nobleman of Milan, Leonardo willed his notes, drawings, and
-paintings. Battista was given the income that Louis XII had granted
-Leonardo from the tolls of the canal at San Cristoforo near Milan.
-Mathurine was granted the “good black cloth, trimmed with leather” and
-two ducats. Moreover, Leonardo outlined in detail the plans for his own
-funeral, right down to the use of ten pounds of candles.
-
-Too weak now to stand any more, Leonardo was confined to his big
-four-poster bed with the canopy. From it he could see the tracery of the
-Chapel of Saint-Hubert against the pale, foreign sky through the little
-window in the corner. The vicar of the church of Saint-Denis was called,
-with two priests and two Franciscan friars, and Leonardo received the
-last sacraments at his bedside.
-
-An entry in his notes reads, “While I thought I was learning to live, I
-have been learning how to die.” But death was not easy for him. With
-tears rolling down his sunken cheeks for “his wasted life,” he died on
-May 2, 1519—fighting even this final interruption to all his work.
-
-King Francis I, who was at St. Germain-en-Laye with his court, wept when
-the news was brought to him. Francesco de’ Melzi was so overcome with
-grief that he waited until June before writing to the half-brothers of
-Leonardo of the Master’s death. He wrote, in part, “He was to me the
-best of fathers, and it is impossible for me to express the grief that
-his death has caused me. Until the day when my body is laid under the
-ground, I shall experience perpetual sorrow, and not without reason, for
-he daily showed me the most devoted and warmest affection.”
-
-And in a closing paragraph Francesco added these words: “His loss is a
-grief to everyone, for it is not in the power of nature to reproduce
-another such man.”
-
-
-
-
- 14
- _Mankind’s Debt to Leonardo_
-
-
-When Leonardo died his notebooks began their separate journeys into
-obscurity. They traveled to different lands and became parts of widely
-disparate collections. It has only been within the last fifty years that
-efforts were made to bring them all together between the covers of one
-volume—a dream that Leonardo himself entertained but never realized. As
-the manuscripts and drawings were brought to light, translated and
-published, the extraordinary scope of Leonardo’s scientific explorations
-was revealed.
-
-Mathematician, anatomist, botanist, astronomer and geologist form only
-part of the long list of his accomplishments and give the clue to the
-man who considered all the natural world within his province of study.
-Because of the universality of Leonardo’s scientific thought he has been
-frequently mentioned as the forerunner of such men as Galileo Galilei,
-Sir Isaac Newton, James Watt, Francis Bacon and William Harvey. Although
-Leonardo cannot be credited with the actual discoveries that these men
-made, his methods of investigation pointed the way down the paths that
-they would follow.
-
-The key to Leonardo’s methods lies in a quotation from his notes on
-vision. He wrote of vision as _saper vedere_—“to know how to see”—and he
-referred to the eye as “the window of the soul.” Again and again, he
-stressed the importance of observation and personal experience. Although
-he himself was well read, he emphasized that “science comes by
-observation not by authority.” His supreme talent for drawing underlines
-his credo and is inseparable from his science. What he saw in the
-natural world about him needed investigating. The results of these
-investigations were transformed into drawings as the most certain method
-for passing this knowledge along to others. The best example of this
-attitude is represented by his anatomical studies. To merely draw the
-living figure in front of him was not sufficient—it was imperative to
-know what he was drawing. He turned to the dissecting room and after
-intensive study produced some of the finest anatomical drawings in the
-world—and among the easiest for others to understand.
-
-What Walter Pater wrote of the Renaissance—“in many things great rather
-by what it designed or aspired to than by what it actually
-achieved”—could be a summation of Leonardo’s own lifetime of effort in
-science. He labored to bring mankind from the morass of medieval
-superstitions onto the firm ground of natural facts. With an insatiable
-curiosity Leonardo attempted the impossible task of encompassing all
-knowledge. Thus he established his right to immortality—for it was an
-attempt that shone like a beacon in a world dark with ignorance.
-
-
-
-
- _Significant Dates in Leonardo’s Life_
-
-
- 1452 April 15. Birth of Leonardo.
- 1467 Commences apprenticeship with Verrochio in Florence.
- 1478 Commissioned for altarpiece in the Palace of the
- Signoria.
- 1481 Commissioned to paint an altarpiece for Convent of San
- Donato.
- 1482-83(?) Leonardo leaves Florence for the court of Ludovico
- Sforza in Milan.
- 1483 Begins equestrian monument of Francesco Sforza for
- Ludovico.
- 1484-86 Plague in Milan.
- 1490 April 23. Recommences equestrian monument and starts
- book on light and shade.
- 1496 Meets with Fra Luca Pacioli, professor of mathematics.
- 1498 _The Last Supper_ completed.
- 1499 Apr. Land awarded to Leonardo near Porta Vercellina.
- Oct. French occupy Milan. Dec. Leonardo leaves Milan
- with Pacioli.
- 1500 Leonardo arrives in Mantua. Travels to Venice and
- returns to Florence.
- 1502 In the service of Cesare Borgia.
- 1503 Returns to Florence, commences work on a canal to sea.
- 1504 Begins the painting of battle of Anghiari. Father dies.
- Attempt at flight (?).
- 1506 May. Leaves Florence for Milan at summons of Charles
- d’Amboise, French military governor.
- 1507 Sept. Goes to Florence to settle father’s will.
- 1508 July. Returns to Milan.
- 1511 Works with Marc Antonio della Torre on anatomical
- research.
- 1512 French lose Milan.
- 1513 Leonardo leaves Milan for Rome. Serves Giuliano de’
- Medici, brother of Pope Leo X.
- 1516 Leonardo leaves Rome for France to serve King Francis I.
- 1519 May 2. Death of Leonardo.
-
-
-
-
- _Index_
-
-
- A
- Abbaco, Benedetto dell’, 5
- Adda river, 124
- “Adoration of the Magi,” 29, 30
- Adriatic, the, 62, 93
- “Air conditioner,” 69
- Air, study of, 65, 66, 99
- “Alarm clock,” 57
- Albert of Saxony, 81
- Alessandria, fortress of, 83
- Alfonso of Calabria, 38
- Alps, the, 37, 67
- Amadeo, Antonio, 58
- Amadori, Albiera di Giovanni, 2
- Amadori, Alessandro, 3, 111
- Amboise, _see_ Chateau d’Amboise
- Amontons, 134
- Anatomy, human, 52, 53, 107, 109, 119, 125-127, 138
- Anchiano, 2
- Anemometer, 65, 66
- Anemoscope, 65
- Anghiari, battle of, 103, 110, 113
- Aquadello, 124
- Aquila, Battista dell’, 139
- Arabs, the, 54
- Archimedes, 41, 67, 81, 134
- Architecture, 50, 58
- Argyropoulos, John, 17
- Aristotle, 17, 23, 42, 48, 81, 89
- Arithmetic, 77
- Arithmetico, Benedetto, 16
- Armored vehicle, 39, 40
- Arno river, 25, 31, 96, 100-106, 109
- Arrezzo, 93
- Ascanio, Cardinal, 83
- Astronomy, 80-82, 104, 105
- Atlantic Ocean, 19
- “Automobile,” 32, 33
- Autopsies, 107
- Avicenna, 53
-
-
- B
- Bacon, Francis, 160
- Bacon, Roger, 120
- Badia, the, 7
- Battista, 155, 157
- Bayzid II, 94
- Beatis, Antonio de’, 151
- Bianca Maria, 64
- Bible, the, 62, 104, 141
- Birds, flight of, 24, 65, 66, 76, 99, 119
- Black Death, _see_ Bubonic plague
- Blois, 152
- Bologna, 144
- Bombard, 26
- Bombs, 39
- Borgia, Cesare, 82, 86-97, 102, 139
- Borgias, the, 102
- Botticelli, Sandro, 33
- Boureau, Guillaume, 156
- Bramante, 68, 131
- Bridge building, 95
- Bubonic plague, 45-47
- Buonarroti, Michelangelo, _see_ Michelangelo
-
-
- C
- “Camera obscura,” 55
- Campo Morto, battle of, 38
- Cannon, 26, 33, 41
- Caravaggio, siege of, 124
- Cardano, Girolamo, 113
- Carles, Geffroy, 115, 116
- Carpentry, 135, 136
- Cassano, castle of, 124
- Castel’ Sant’ Angelo, 130
- Caterina, 2
- Cellini, Benvenuto, 100
- Centrifugal pump, 121, 122
- Cesena, 94
- Chambord, castle of, 152
- Charles d’Amboise, 94, 114-117, 121, 124, 127, 139
- Chateau d’Amboise, 147-156
- Cher river, 152
- Christ, 30, 74, 77, 78
- Church of the Annunciation of the Servite Order of Monks, 90
- Church, the, 18, 48, 53, 63, 104, 145
- Cioni, Andrea di Michele di Francesco de’, _see_ Verrochio, Andrea
- del
- City Planning, 44, 45, 47
- City-states, 9, 10
- Civitavecchia, 143, 144
- Cloux, Manoir de, 148, 154, 156
- Coins, minting of, 47
- Collections, 4
- Columbus, Christopher, 19
- Constantinople, 95
- Corte, Bernardino da, 83
- Corte Vecchia, 56
- Coulomb, A. C., 17, 134
- Council of Eighty, 109
- Council of Florence, 23, 106
- Councilors and Tribunal of Venice, 89
- Credi, Lorenzo di, 13
- Cusanus, Cardinal, 42
-
-
- D
- Dams, 101
- Danti, Giovanni Battista, 96, 97
- d’Aragona, Cardinal Luigi, 151
- Darwin, 105
- d’Auvergne, Madelaine, 153
- David, statue of, 106
- _De Ludo Geometrico_, 134
- d’Este, Beatrice, 60, 61, 69, 86
- d’Este, Isabella, 86, 87, 91
- Diocletian, Emperor, 135
- Diseases, 109
- Dissection, 53, 126, 145
- Diver’s suit, 89
- Drawing, _see_ Painting
- Drum, mechanical, 61
- Dynamics, 140
-
-
- E
- Earth, the, 104, 105
- Eclipse of the sun, 48
- Einstein, 153
- Equilibrium, 141
- Euclid, 54, 91
- Eye, the, 54, 55
-
-
- F
- Ferdinand, King of Naples, 25, 27
- Ferrara, 70
- Ferrari, Ambrogio, 42
- Fiesole, 111, 113, 156
- Flemish painters, 15
- Flight,
- of arrow, 82, 83
- of birds, 24, 65, 66, 76, 99, 119
- problems of, 70, 71, 75, 76, 96-100, 111-113
- Florence, 7-19, 25-27, 32, 38, 53, 68, 93-96, 100-103
- Flying machine, 70, 71, 75, 76, 112
- Foix, Gaston de, 127
- Forts, 88
- Forum of the Caesars, 134
- Four elements, 48
- France, 67-69, 78, 82-84, 94, 114-120, 125, 127, 128, 139,
- 142-145, 152
- Francis I, 143-145, 148-157
- Fraternity of the Immaculate Conception, 43, 44, 47
- Friction, 140, 141
-
-
- G
- Galen, 52, 53
- Galileo, Galilei, 134, 141, 160
- Genoa, 143
- Geocentric theory, _see_ Ptolemaic theory
- Geography, 18, 19
- Geology, 103, 104
- Geometry, 91, 134
- Georg, 131, 133, 140, 143, 145
- Geotropism, 79
- Germany, 47, 69
- Ghirlandaio, Domenico di Tommaso del, 33
- Giocondo, Francesco del, 98
- Giovanni “the Piper,” 100
- Gonzaga, Francesco, 86
- Gothic tradition, 50
- Gravity, 140, 141
- Greeks, the, 69
- Guido, 23
- Guild, 19
-
-
- H
- Hadrian, Emperor, 130
- Harvey, William, 126, 160
- Heavens, observation of, 80
- Heliocentric theory, 48, 81
- Heliotropism, 79
- Highmore, 53
- Hippocrates, 52
- Holy Roman Empire, 9
- Hooke, Robert, 141
- Horse, anatomy of the, 41
- Hydraulic pump, 74, 122, 123
- Hydraulics, 14
- Hydrodynamics, 141
- Hygrometer, 30, 31
-
-
- I
- Imola, 95, 96
- Inclination gauge, 66, 67
- India, 18
- _Introduction to Perspective, or the Function of the Eye_, 58
- Inventions, 25-27, 38-40
- Irradiation, 55
- Irrigation, 101
- Isabella of Aragon, 51
- Isonzo river, 88
- Istanbul, _see_ Constantinople
-
-
- J
- Johannes, 133, 143, 145
- Judas, 74, 77, 78
-
-
- K
- King Charles VIII, 67-69, 78, 82, 120, 148
-
-
- L
- Lake Como, 125
- Lamps, 59
- Lanfredini, Francesca, 2, 7
- “Last Supper,” 30, 72, 74, 77, 92, 99, 138
- League of Cambria, 124
- Leghorn, 100
- Leibig, 41
- Leonardo da Vinci,
- and the Church, 18, 48, 104, 145
- birth of, 2
- death of, 157
- early years of, 1-8
- illness of, 142, 150
- moves to Florence, 10
- notebooks of, 25, 29, 140, 152, 159, 160
- Levite, 118
- _Light and Shade_, 54
- Lighting, 59
- Lilienthal, Otto, 100
- Livoli river, 139
- Loches, 92
- Loire river, 147, 149, 152
- Lombardy, 37, 62, 78, 82, 83, 121,148
- Louis XII (of Orleans), 78, 82, 92, 94, 114, 116, 119, 124, 142,
- 157
- Louvre, the, 44
- Lucullus, 130
- Lyons, 152
- Lyre, silver, 34, 35
-
-
- M
- Machiavelli, Niccolò, 96, 100, 102, 106, 109
- Machine gun, 27
- Machinery, improvement of, 16
- Madonna Lisa, _see_ Mona Lisa
- Malaria, 139
- Mandeville, Sir John, 103
- Manenti, 88
- Mantua, 84, 86, 87
- Mapmaking, 19, 93, 95, 96, 100, 101
- Martelli, Piero, 118
- Martini, Francesco di Giorgio, 58
- Martino river, 139
- Mathurine, 156, 157
- Maximilian I, 64
- Medici, Giovanni de’, 130
- Medici, Giuliano de’, 21, 130, 132, 138-146
- Medici, Lorenzo de’, 16, 21, 26, 27, 29, 35, 39, 127, 130, 132,
- 146, 153
- Medici, Piero de’, 10, 16
- Medicis, the, 10, 21, 23, 26, 27, 33, 34, 68, 130, 131, 140, 142,
- 146
- Melzi, Francesco de’, 117, 128, 130, 140, 142, 145, 150, 155, 157,
- 158
- Michelangelo, 106, 107, 113, 131, 137, 144, 145
- Middle Ages, 81, 104
- Migliorotti, Atalante, 35-38, 87
- Milan, 9, 33-48, 60, 64, 68, 78, 82, 83, 85, 95, 114-128, 143, 144
- Milan cathedral, 50
- Military,
- defenses, 88, 89
- machines, 25-27, 33, 38-40
- Millstones, 75
- Mitre valve, 123
- Mirrors, 133
- “Mona Lisa,” 99, 103
- Monferrato, 62
- Monte Albano, 1, 2, 5
- Monte Cecero, 113
- Montorfano, 72
- Muscles, 109, 119
- Music, 34, 35
-
-
- N
- Naples, 9, 27, 68, 69
- Needle sharpener, 75
- Netherlands, the, 95
- Newton, Isaac, 24, 56, 123, 141, 160
- Newton’s First Law of Motion, 123
- Newton’s law of gravitation, 83
- _Notes_, 14
- Novara, battle of, 92
-
-
- O
- Odometer, 69
- Oggionno, Marco d’, 58
- Orient, the, 89
- Ornithopter, 111, 112
-
-
- P
- Pacioli, Fra Luca, 76, 77, 80, 84, 86-91, 133
- Padua, 125
- Painting, 4-7, 29-32, 43, 44, 71, 72, 91, 99, 105, 110, 112
- Palatine hill, 135
- Palazzo della Signoria, 12, 21-25, 103
- Palazzo Vecchio, 12
- Parachute, 71
- Paris, 44
- Parma, 138
- Pater, Walter, 161
- Pavia, 51, 58, 125
- Pazzi conspiracy, 21, 23, 25
- Pazzi, Francesco de’, 23
- Pera, 95
- “Periscope,” the, 89
- Perugia, 96
- Perugino, Pietro, 13, 33, 107
- Pesaro, 93
- Peschiera, 124
- Pharisee, 118
- Philiberta, 142
- Phyllotaxis, 79
- Physics, 17
- Piazzetta, the, 87
- Pincio hill, 130
- Piombino, 93, 139, 154
- Pisa, 25, 100-102, 110
- Pitti Palace, 31
- Plague, _see_ Bubonic plague
- Plants, study of, 79, 80
- Platonic school, 54
- Pliny, 23
- Plutarch, 81
- Pollaiuolo, 53
- Ponte Vecchio, 31
- Pontine marshes, 139, 154
- Pope Alexander VI, 82, 92, 102
- Pope Innocent VIII, 63
- Pope Julius II, 124, 127, 128, 130, 131
- Pope Leo X, 130-132, 139, 142-146, 153
- Pope Sixtus IV, 21, 33
- Porta del Popolo, 129
- Porta Romana, 29
- Porta Vercellina, 79, 115
- Porto Cesanatico, 94
- Portugal, 26
- Predis, Bernardino de, 47
- Predis, Giovanni Ambrogio de, 43, 44, 47, 56
- Ptolemaic theory, 48
- Ptolemy, 23, 54, 103
-
-
- Q
- Queen Claude, 152
-
-
- R
- Raphael, 107, 131, 137
- Ravenna, battle of, 127
- Red Book of the Painters of Florence, 19
- Reflection, law of, 56
- Renaissance, 89, 104, 125, 161
- Riario, Girolamo, 21, 38
- Rimini, 93
- Rome, 9, 33, 47, 69, 128-146
- Romorantin, 150, 152
- Rosate, Ambrogio da, 63
- Rumford, 56
- Rustici, Giovanni, 118
-
-
- S
- “St. Anne with the Virgin and Child,” 91, 92
- St. Augustine, 42
- Saint-Denis church, 157
- St. Germain-en-Laye, 157
- Saint-Hubert, chapel of, 153, 157
- St. John, 118, 154
- St. John the Baptist, 151
- St. Luke, 19
- St. Mary of the Virgin, 96
- St. Peter’s, church of, 131
- Salai, 86, 115
- Salviati, Francesco, 21
- San Bernardo, chapel of, 23
- San Cristoforo, 157
- San Donato a Scopeto, 29
- San Lorenzo, 144, 145
- San Marco, Little Square of, 87
- Sanseverino, Galeazzo da, 82, 83
- Sant’ Onofrio, hospital, 107
- Santa Croce, church of, 107
- Santa Maria delle Grazie, 71, 78
- Santa Maria Novella, 107
- Sanzio, Raffaello, _see_ Raphael
- Savoy, 142
- Scarlione, Bartolommeo degli, 43
- Sculpture, 41, 49, 52-54, 58-64, 118
- Sforza, Duke Gian Galeazzo, 51, 56, 68, 120
- Sforza, Francesco, 41, 47, 49, 61, 64
- Sforza, Francesco (child), 68
- Sforza, Ludovico, 33-47, 51, 52, 56, 57, 60-72, 76-79, 82-84, 92,
- 115, 117, 120, 138, 146, 154
- Sforza monument, 49-59, 61, 64, 120
- Sforzas, the, 40, 56, 57, 71, 79, 83, 117, 120, 154
- Shells, 62, 63
- Signoria, the, 96, 100-106, 110, 114, 116
- Sistine Chapel, 33, 132, 137
- Soderini, Piero, 103, 106, 109, 114-116
- Sologne, 154
- Spain, 18, 69, 127, 139, 142, 143
- Statics, 140
- Steam, 41
- Strabo, 23, 103, 104
- Swiss, 127, 128, 143
-
-
- T
- Ticino gate, 44
- Torre, Marcantonio della, 125, 128
- Toscanelli, Paolo del Pozzo, 18, 19, 42, 93
- Touraine, 92
- Trivulzio, Marshal Gian Giacomo, 120, 121, 125, 128, 143
- Turks, the, 87-90, 94
- Tuscany, 93
- Tyrrhenian coast, 143
-
-
- U
- Uffizi Gallery, 25, 32
- University of Padua, 125
- University of Pavia, 63
- Urbino, 93
-
-
- V
- Valentinois, Duke of, _see_ Borgia, Cesare
- Valois, Marguerite de, 150
- Vatican, the, 47, 130-145
- Venice, 9, 69, 87-89, 124, 125, 127
- Verrochio, Andrea del, 7, 12-19, 23, 118
- Via Ghibellina, 90
- Vigevano, 68, 75
- Vinci, 2, 13
- Vinci, da, Giuliano, 117
- Vinci, da, Piero, 2-7, 10, 12, 90, 106, 117
- “Virgin of the Rocks,” 44
- Vitellozzo, 93
- Vitruvius, 77
-
-
- W
- Water, study of, 67, 101, 102, 121, 122
- Watt, James, 160
- Witelo, 58
-
-
- Y
- Yugoslavia, 88
-
- [Illustration: Endpaper, portraits of scientists]
-
- [Illustration: Endpaper, names of scientists]
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
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-
-—In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
- _underscores_.
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-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Leonardo da Vinci, Pathfinder of Science, by
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-
-Title: Leonardo da Vinci, Pathfinder of Science
-
-Author: Henry Sampson Gillette
-
-Release Date: June 2, 2017 [EBook #54827]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LEONARDO DA VINCI, PATHFINDER OF SCIENCE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
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-
-
-
- [Illustration: _Portrait of Leonardo da Vinci, after a woodcut
- published in_ Lives of the Painters, _by Vasari. The Latin
- inscription reads_
- LIONARDO DA VINCI PITT. E SCVLTOR FIOR.
- _Leonardo da Vinci, Painter & Sculptor of Florence._]
-
-
-
-
- _Immortals of Science_
-
-
-
-
- LEONARDO
- DA VINCI
- _Pathfinder of Science_
-
-
- _Henry S. Gillette_
-
- PICTURES BY THE AUTHOR
-
-
- _Franklin Watts, Inc., 575 Lexington Avenue
- New York 22, New York_
-
-
- _To my wife Trudy_
-
- FIRST PRINTING
-
- _Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 62-8426_
- Copyright 1962 by Franklin Watts, Inc.
- _Manufactured in the United States of America_
-
- DESIGNED BY BERNARD KLEIN
-
-
-AUTHOR'S NOTE
-
-It is natural that, within the confines of these few pages, many facets
-of Leonardo's extraordinary personality will be missing. That he was an
-artist, a man of letters, a poet and a philosopher are well known. That
-he was also a man of humor, as well as a prophet whose vision extended
-far beyond his times, are facts that I have also tried to include in
-this biography. There are many gaps in our knowledge of his life, and
-these I have sometimes filled with my own imagination to give some
-continuity to his story. Little is known of his early days, his period
-of travels after leaving Milan and his years in Rome. There is, too, a
-certain mystery in his relations to those around him, since our
-descriptions of him derive mostly from his often cryptic, personal notes
-and from biographers who wrote of him many years after he had died.
-
-This book is about Leonardo the scientist, and to fully write of his
-many accomplishments would require an encyclopedic mind. My intent has
-been to extract the essence of his story in the hopes that it would
-arouse the enthusiasm of a reader to further his interest in those
-other, more fully documented books--and, above all, in the notebooks
-that Leonardo himself wrote.
-
- --H. S. G.
-
- _Rome, August 1961_
-
-
-
-
- _Contents_
-
-
- 1 _The Shield_ 1
- 2 _Florence_ 9
- 3 _A Studio of His Own_ 20
- 4 _Years of Frustration_ 28
- 5 _Milan_ 37
- 6 _The Monument_ 49
- 7 _Success_ 60
- 8 _The French_ 73
- 9 _Cesare Borgia_ 86
- 10 _Shattered Hopes_ 98
- 11 _The Return to Milan_ 114
- 12 _Rome_ 129
- 13 _The Last Years_ 147
- 14 _Mankind's Debt to Leonardo_ 159
- _Significant Dates in Leonardo's Life_ 162
- _Index_ 164
-
-
-
-
- 1
- _The Shield_
-
-
-Dusk was beginning to gather in the valley at the foot of Monte Albano
-as young Leonardo turned toward home. Stopping by a rushing stream to
-wash the dust of the day's explorations from his face, he laid aside his
-cap and his leather pouch and plunged his hands into the cold mountain
-water. He felt the force of the current and watched the whirl and flow
-of bubbles around his bare arms. There was the same feeling, he thought,
-to the flow of air he had experienced blowing around the rocky crags of
-the mountains.
-
-This evening, however, there was no time to sit awhile and think. He was
-in a hurry to get home. Hastily scooping the water in his cupped palms,
-he splashed it over his head and face, then shaking the water from his
-hair he rose and picked up his cap. He took a satisfied look in his
-pouch, slung it over his shoulder and headed down the stony trail to the
-village of Vinci.
-
-Vinci was a small hill town situated on a spur of Monte Albano. Its
-castle and the bell tower above the houses seemed like sentinels
-guarding the slopes of vineyards and olive groves spreading down into
-the valley.
-
-Leonardo da Vinci, which means "Leonardo from the town of Vinci,"
-thought about his home. He knew that he had been born in Anchiano, near
-Vinci, on April 15 of the year 1452, to a peasant girl named Caterina.
-At the age of five, he had been sent for by his natural father, Piero da
-Vinci, to come and live at his family's house in Vinci, a comfortable
-and roomy place with a spacious garden. Piero, five years before, had
-married Albiera di Giovanni Amadori, a girl of sixteen. They had had no
-children of their own, and Leonardo was welcomed into the home with
-affection by his young stepmother.
-
-When Leonardo was about eleven, young Albiera died, leaving a darkened
-and saddened house. Two years later his father married another girl by
-the name of Francesca Lanfredini. Although laughter and song soon
-replaced the grief, Leonardo never forgot the love of his first
-stepmother.
-
-Also in the house lived Antonio, his grandfather, who was eighty-five,
-his grandmother, his uncle Allessandro Amadori and family, and, best of
-all, his uncle Francesco. The da Vincis, who could trace their
-beginnings in the town back to the thirteenth century, had always been
-respected lawyers and landowners. Because Uncle Francesco was neither a
-lawyer nor a great landowner, the people of the town said he did
-nothing; but he tended the family vineyards, and, to the delight of
-Leonardo, he raised his own silkworms.
-
-As Leonardo entered the main gate, he noticed that the oil lamps were
-being lit above the stalls of the marketplace, and the lively confusion
-of the last hours of business was in full swing. People nodded and
-smiled to him, for as a boy of fifteen he was already a striking figure.
-He was tall with long, auburn hair falling to his shoulders and his face
-was so charming that it was frequently compared to those of the angels
-painted in the chapels of the church. The music of his lute, the sound
-of his voice, and the gentleness of his person were such that all hearts
-and doors were open to him.
-
-Tonight, however, Leonardo avoided the usual invitations to stop and
-chat. His father would be back from Florence; he had been going there
-more and more frequently as his fame as a lawyer grew. Now Leonardo was
-thinking that he had almost finished the assignment his father, half
-jokingly, had given him many weeks ago--so many weeks ago that he was
-sure his father had forgotten about it. At that time a peasant, whose
-skill in providing fish and game for the table of Piero's big household
-was greatly appreciated, had asked a favor of him. This man had a round,
-wooden shield cut from a fig tree and he had asked Piero to have a
-design painted on it for him in Florence. Piero, who had noticed the
-sketches his son was making of plants, rock formations, and scenes in
-his wanderings about the countryside, decided to test his son's ability
-and gave the shield to the boy. In the secrecy of his room, into which
-no one was allowed, Leonardo had smoothed and prepared the wood, and on
-it he was painting a monster.
-
-Scrambling over rocks, through streams, and into caves, Leonardo had
-been in the habit of gathering all manner of creeping and crawling life.
-Patiently he would bring these home in his leather pouch and carefully
-study and draw them. Maggots, bats, butterflies, locusts, and snakes
-added to the confusion of the boy's already cluttered room. Everywhere
-he went he collected the things that aroused his curiosity; and as a
-result, his room was always filled with rocks, dried plants, flowers,
-the skeletons of small animals--and his pages of notations and drawings.
-Now Leonardo had combined the features of these small forms of life to
-make a monster--emerging from a dark grotto and breathing fire and
-smoke--a thing more terrifying than if done from imagination, for each
-feature was a duplicate of a reality in nature.
-
-Unobserved, Leonardo reached the privacy of his room and emptied this
-day's collection on a table beside the shield. He lit a candle and
-examined his catch--a lizard and a large grasshopper. These would
-complete his picture; and, the most extraordinary find of the day--a
-fossil seashell found high on the slopes of a mountain! How did it get
-there? Was it a result of the flood about which his religion had taught
-him? Had an immense wave deposited this ancient sea-life high on the
-Albano mountains? Looking more closely he saw that it was a type of
-sea-snail and in almost perfect preservation. This he would have to
-think about and examine later.
-
-Now, however, the picture must be completed, for he hoped to surprise
-his father in the morning. But just then, Leonardo heard the family
-stirring below and his father calling him to dinner. Reluctantly he left
-his table, made himself presentable and went downstairs.
-
-"Ah, Leonardo," his father said when he appeared in the family dining
-room. "I saw Benedetto dell'Abbaco on the way in town and he tells me
-you haven't been to school as often as you should--is that true?"
-
-"Yes, Papa--but I'm not doing badly."
-
-"Signor Benedetto might agree, at least in your mathematics. He tells me
-you ask him questions that often make him stop and think. But Leonardo,
-you have other subjects--Latin, reading, and writing--as well as
-arithmetic. You mustn't neglect the others, my boy. But come--let us
-eat."
-
-Together they sat down with the rest of the family--a large, prosperous,
-and happy gathering. When dinner was over Leonardo made hurried excuses
-to all the family, protesting that he was too tired to sing, and escaped
-back into his room. For a long time he worked, unaware that the house
-was growing quieter. Finally he laid down his brushes and his maul
-stick, pushed his chair back and smiled a triumphant smile. The shield
-was finished. Tomorrow he would ask his father in to look at it.
-
-Conscious now that everybody had gone to bed, Leonardo blew out his
-candle and opened the shutters. The night sky was a panoply of stars and
-only here and there was the dark loneliness of the valley relieved by
-pinpoints of light. Leonardo leaned his head against the window frame
-and stared at the blue infinity above him. What exactly were the stars?
-Did all of them move around the earth? What was the haze that obscured
-the horizon ever so faintly? What was that sea-snail doing in the
-mountains? Why? How?
-
-The next morning Leonardo found his father and Uncle Francesco in the
-garden deep in conversation about their vineyards and olive groves.
-
-"Papa, I have a surprise for you up in my room--can you come now?"
-
-"Yes, Leonardo. What is it you have found now--not a better way to raise
-my grapes, I'll wager!"
-
-The elder da Vinci put his arm around the boy's shoulder and went with
-him up to the door of his room.
-
-"Wait here, Papa, until I say to come in."
-
-Leonardo unlocked his door, lifted the cloth from the shield standing on
-the easel and opened the shutter just a trifle so that a soft light
-filled the room.
-
-"Papa--you can come in now."
-
-Piero entered--he had long forgotten the round piece of wood--and
-suddenly he froze in the middle of the room.
-
-"Have mercy on me!" he said when he saw the horrible fire-breathing
-creature. In the dimness of the room, the monster and the murky cave
-from which it was emerging were terribly real. Piero actually started to
-back out of the room in fright, when Leonardo laid a hand on his
-shoulder.
-
-"Papa, this work has served its purpose; take it away, then, for it has
-produced the intended effect."
-
-The shield was the talk of the house; it was set up and marveled at. As
-for Piero, he resolved to take it with him to Florence secretly and sell
-it, giving his peasant friend some cheap substitute that he would buy in
-the marketplace.
-
-So, a few days later, Leonardo's father saddled his horse and had the
-shield wrapped and packed in his saddlebag. Also, unknown to his son, he
-took some of the boy's drawings. Piero had now realized that Leonardo
-might have a rare talent. Moreover, he was planning to move to Florence
-with his family so that he could be nearer to the Badia, or the law
-offices of the city, for whom he had been frequently employed. There,
-thought Piero, Leonardo's talent could be developed under the best of
-teachers.
-
-It was many days before Leonardo's father returned; when he did, he
-gathered his family together and it was obvious to all that he had
-exciting news. First, Piero announced that he and Francesca would move
-to Florence since he and a law partner were now engaged in securing
-office space from the Badia. It was a handsome office centrally located
-opposite the palace of the _Podest_, or chief magistrate.
-
-Then, turning to Leonardo, he said: "I have shown some of your drawings
-to Master Andrea del Verrochio and his enthusiasm for your skill has
-decided me to place you in his studio as an apprentice. What do you
-think of that?"
-
-Leonardo was stunned. Verrochio, the great artist and sculptor!
-Florence! The city-state whose power and influence had spread far beyond
-her own walls. Now he would study in earnest; now he would find the
-answers to his never-ending questions. He embraced his father and could
-say nothing.
-
-
-
-
- 2
- _Florence_
-
-
-The Italy of Medieval and Renaissance days was not a unified country as
-it is today. It was, of course, part of the Holy Roman Empire, but the
-main governing forces in the land were in the city-states, of which
-Florence was one of the most powerful. A city-state was much more than a
-city--it was almost a kingdom in itself. Each had its own army, and very
-often there were large-scale wars between such city-states as Milan,
-Naples, Rome, Venice--and of course Florence. The Italians of those days
-considered themselves citizens--not of Italy as a whole--but of their
-particular cities; people coming from other cities were looked upon as
-"foreigners," even though they looked the same, wore the same style of
-clothing, and spoke the same language!
-
-All the power, influence, and ideas of this period in history were
-concentrated within the city-states. A man might be a very fine artist,
-engineer, or philosopher, but unless he managed to bring his work to the
-attention of the ruler of one of the cities, he was likely to remain in
-obscurity. Thus it was that Piero da Vinci, knowing that his son would
-have to have a powerful patron if he was to succeed at all, brought
-Leonardo to Florence.
-
-In 1467, when the da Vinci family entered Florence, the city had been
-under the rule of the Medici family for some thirty-three years. As it
-was in most of these city-states, the head of the ruling family--at this
-time Piero de' Medici--was in charge of the government of Florence and
-the surrounding countryside. But Piero was fifty-one years old and
-ailing, and he had only two years of life left at the time of Leonardo's
-arrival.
-
-
-None of this was in Leonardo's mind as he rode with his father through
-one of the great, guarded gates of the city. He was thinking, not of
-politics, but of the fabulous sights that awaited him in this rich
-center of commerce and activity.
-
-The narrow streets of the city were so crowded that is was necessary for
-the da Vinci family, together with their servants and the donkeys laden
-with household effects, to go single file. Leonardo rode behind his
-father, shouting questions, and, at the same time, turning his head from
-side to side so as not to miss a thing. Brought up in the solitude of
-mountains and valleys, and accustomed to the quiet life of a village,
-the boy of fifteen was overwhelmed with the excitement of the city.
-
- [Illustration: _Leonardo rode behind his father, turning his head
- from side to side so as not to miss a thing._]
-
-The party was now making its way past the booths of hundreds of shops,
-past magnificent palaces built by wealthy merchants, and across squares
-filled with the produce from hundreds of farms. Every now and then,
-Leonardo caught a glimpse of the cathedral dome, one of the
-architectural marvels of its day. He had seen the cathedral with its
-bell tower and also the towering spire of the Palazzo della
-Signoria--which means the Palace of the Lords--from a hill as they
-approached the city. This palace still stands and today it is called the
-Palazzo Vecchio or Old Palace. But now these sights were lost to view in
-the midst of the narrow streets, other churches, flags, and the lines of
-washing that seemed to hang everywhere. Frequently, Piero's party was
-pressed against a wall as a procession shoved its way through a street.
-Sometimes it was by armed horsemen escorting a rich banker to some
-appointment; other times it was a file of cowled monks observing some
-saint's day and carrying huge wax candles before them.
-
-After they had crossed the magnificent square of the Signoria, in front
-of the Palace of the same name, Piero leaned down from his horse and
-asked a blacksmith where Verrochio's studio might be. The man shouted
-above the din of clanging hammers:
-
-"Everybody knows that shop, Signor--it's down that street and to the
-right! You can't miss it--ask anybody!"
-
-The man was right, for the workshop of Verrochio was not hard to find.
-Verrochio was considered one of Florence's finest artists and everybody
-knew of him. He was a short, broad-shouldered man of thirty-two with a
-round face, shrewd eyes, a thin mouth and dark curly hair that reached
-almost to his shoulders. In his workshop were two other
-apprentices--young Pietro Perugino, who was six years older than
-Leonardo, and Lorenzo di Credi, a boy of eight. They all lived in the
-house together and, after Leonardo was shown where he would sleep and
-had put away the few things he had brought with him from Vinci, he was
-taken to the place where he would work.
-
-Verrochio, whose real name was Andrea di Michele di Francesco de' Cioni,
-had taken the name of his teacher, a renowned goldsmith, as was the
-custom in the shops at that time. Verrochio himself was a skilled
-goldsmith. But to be an artist and to have your own workshop in the year
-1467 meant being a specialist in many things. Into Verrochio's place
-came a great variety of artistic work--painting pictures, sculpting and
-architecture, goldsmithing, designing and making armor, creating
-decorated furniture, designing mechanical toys, and even preparing stage
-scenery.
-
-Verrochio, of course, would attend to the greater creative tasks, while
-his apprentices did the chores of grinding colors, preparing panels for
-painting, making armatures for his sculpture, hewing to size the marble
-for a statue, preparing molds for casting, building models for a new
-palace or church--in fact, all the countless number of preparations to
-the finished work. Sometimes, if an apprentice showed extraordinary
-talent, he would be allowed to work on the finished painting or assist
-with the final strokes of the chisel. Verrochio was a busy man and a
-successful artisan. To further his own ambitions, he was now absorbed in
-the perfecting of mathematical perspective and the study of geometry.
-
-The curious Leonardo had come to the right man. In Verrochio's workshop,
-where so many crafts were learned at the same time, his powers of
-observation were able to develop; his hunger to know about mathematics
-was fed. In Verrochio, Leonardo found a teacher who would encourage
-these investigations and urge him to study a wide variety of subjects.
-Leonardo now felt his lack of a fuller education. He started to borrow
-mathematics textbooks and to seek out men who could teach him what he
-needed to know. After each day's work was over, Leonardo would continue
-on into the night, catching up on his neglected studies and discovering
-for himself new areas of thought such as anatomy, movement and weight,
-botany, and another subject which was to occupy much of his later
-years--_hydraulics_, or the useful application of water power.
-
-In these early years, Leonardo commenced his famous _Notes_. He had
-developed his own "secret" writing in his childhood at Vinci. These
-notes--consisting of observations, proportions, and reminders to
-himself--were inscribed on his drawings. They were, however, unreadable
-to the eye--until held up to a mirror. Leonardo was lefthanded and could
-write fluently in this strange manner. It could have been for many
-reasons that he did so--perhaps from a natural desire for secrecy,
-perhaps for reasons of safety from possible enemies. In those days,
-plots and counterplots of all sorts were commonplace--a rumor or a
-whisper in the right ear could destroy a reputation or financially ruin
-a career.
-
-Leonardo was popular in Florence. He traveled with the young men of the
-town, and his handsome appearance and enormous strength (he could bend a
-horseshoe in his hands) made him a welcome figure in many houses. He
-continued to play the lute and the lyre. He wrote poetry, composed his
-own music, and sang with a pleasing voice. His blue eyes were kind and
-his manner gentle. He always avoided arguments and competition when he
-could. When he walked through the marketplace and came upon the caged
-birds, he would buy them--just to set them free. Indeed, his love of
-animals had become so great that he no longer ate meat.
-
-During these years in Verrochio's service, Leonardo grew in stature as
-an artist and rapidly developed into a scientist of promise. He amazed
-his master when he painted an angel in an altarpiece that had been
-assigned to Verrochio. He painted it in the new oil colors recently
-acquired from the Flemish painters. So astounded was Verrochio with its
-grace that the master vowed he would never lift a brush again if a "mere
-child" could so surpass him. In this picture there is a tuft of grass
-beside a kneeling figure, also painted by Leonardo, which indicates by
-its careful attention to detail the amount of research he did before
-committing it to canvas. In other paintings he made beautiful drawings
-of a lily and studies of animals and crabs, giving a hint of what was to
-come. For, in these preparatory works, Leonardo could not be satisfied
-until he had thoroughly studied the characteristics of plants and
-animals in general. Later in life, he was to become more and more
-absorbed in these researches until they occupied the greater part of his
-time.
-
-In 1469, when Leonardo had been in Florence only two short years, Piero
-de' Medici died and was succeeded by his son, the mighty Lorenzo de'
-Medici--or Lorenzo the Magnificent, as he was often called. Now the city
-of Florence felt itself under the control of a man who really knew how
-to use power. Lorenzo was Florence; nothing happened without his making
-it happen, and he became one of the most prominent patrons of art and
-scholarship in all of Italy. If Leonardo was to make any headway in
-Florence, he would have to make himself noticed by this new Medici
-ruler.
-
-But Leonardo was not yet worrying about how to make himself a success. A
-young man of seventeen and still an apprentice of Verrochio, Leonardo
-continued to meet new friends with new ideas. It was at about this time
-that he met Benedetto Aritmetico, a prominent scholar and mathematician.
-It is probable that this man drew Leonardo's attention to the practical
-needs of industry and commerce so that some of Leonardo's energy was
-directed toward the study and improvement of existing machinery and the
-invention of labor-saving devices. At any rate, during these months
-Leonardo was walking the streets of Florence, wandering into shops and
-mills, making careful observations of all the various methods of
-manufacturing. The more he saw, the more he thought to himself that one
-man could do the work of many--if only he had the proper machine. He
-even made drawings of laborers with picks and shovels to see if he could
-determine by mathematics better ways to swing and hold the tools.
-
-In addition, the particular problems in the engagement of joints
-fascinated Leonardo, leading him on to the study of more general
-problems such as the transmission of power by gears and the strength of
-materials. He also spent long hours studying geometrical theories and
-reading Greek and Latin classical works. Laboriously, he translated
-these into his own formulas and made comments about them in his
-notebooks. He attended the lectures of John Argyropoulos, a Greek, who
-talked of the Aristotelian theories of natural history, and who had
-translated Aristotle's _Physics_.
-
-The study of physics opened to Leonardo a whole new world of ideas. He
-experimented with cogwheels, and with the improvement of ways to lift
-weights. He became fascinated with the then-known laws of friction and
-built a bench upon which he tested various devices for the overcoming of
-frictional drag; he also tested the natural power of one body to set
-another in motion. This bench with its rollers and weights was similar
-in principle to the one used by the French physicist A. C. Coulomb
-almost three centuries later. Leonardo was indeed growing into a man of
-genius. Now everything from the stars to the flight of an insect
-occupied his thoughts.
-
-At the same time, he continued his studies of drawing and painting.
-Frequently he was seen in Florence following someone whose face had
-interested him--sometimes for the better part of the day--and then at
-night he would fill a page with sketches of this same person from
-memory.
-
-By developing his powers of observation in this way Leonardo came to
-rely more upon his own experiences and less upon what he was told or
-what he read. This brought him into frequent conflict with the
-astrologers, the alchemists and even the Church. The astrologers were
-men who told fortunes by the movements of the stars. The alchemists,
-with their knowledge of chemistry, pretended to be able to talk with
-ghosts and to tell the future. These men Leonardo held in contempt.
-Although he was a devoutly religious man, Leonardo objected to many
-attitudes of the Church which he considered outmoded and which stood in
-the way of scientific progress; because of these objections, he was
-frequently called a pagan.
-
-In this same year of 1469, Leonardo met the aging Paolo del Pozzo
-Toscanelli. Toscanelli was a famous physician, philosopher and
-mathematician who, just the previous year, had marked off on the
-cathedral floor the famous meridian line for determining the dates of
-the various Church holidays. The old man and the boy became not only the
-famous teacher and ardent pupil, but close friends.
-
-One evening at Toscanelli's house, the old man showed young Leonardo a
-globe of the world. Much of it was marked "unknown," but Toscanelli had
-filled in some areas from his own careful calculations and from the
-stories told him by sailors and travelers. Visions of distant lands,
-remote mountain ranges and vast oceans filled Leonardo's imagination as
-Toscanelli spoke. Then Toscanelli tapped the globe to the westward of
-Spain, saying:
-
-"Here will be found a quicker route to India than the world has ever
-known before." Then, turning to Leonardo he murmured, "You will see it
-happen, my boy, in your lifetime."
-
-One by one, Leonardo's childhood questions were being answered.
-Toscanelli told him much about the stars, the fossils of creatures long
-disappeared from the world, and how he believed the earth's early
-formation took place. He also taught the boy the art of drawing a map.
-Not only did Toscanelli greatly influence Leonardo, but the course of
-history as well. Ten years after Toscanelli had died, Christopher
-Columbus, struggling westward over the Atlantic Ocean, was using a map
-that old Toscanelli had sent him, carefully notated with all his
-accumulated wisdom.
-
-Leonardo, in keeping with his own philosophy, tested all this knowledge
-with experiments of his own. Because astronomical instruments were rare,
-crude, and costly, Leonardo borrowed them where he could and later set
-about making his own. He went on to experiment with time measurements,
-devising the first example of the application of a pendulum to regulate
-a clock; by means of two springs, it measured the minutes as well as the
-hours. So for the next three years Leonardo worked in Verrochio's studio
-and continued his studies and experiments.
-
-In 1472 Leonardo's name was inscribed in the Red Book of the Painters of
-Florence, which was the official _guild_, or artists' union of that
-time. But he was so poor that he couldn't afford the dues and hardly had
-the money for the necessary candles to be burnt before St. Luke, the
-patron saint of all painters. Although his father now had a spacious
-apartment in a house on one of the main squares of Florence, Leonardo
-continued to live with Verrochio. In fact, he stayed on past his formal
-training period for about four more years, grateful to the kindly man
-for the food and bed he offered.
-
-
-
-
- 3
- _A Studio of His Own_
-
-
-On Sunday, April 26, 1478, the bells of the cathedral were ringing
-loudly over Florence, almost drowning out the noise of the crowds in the
-street. Shutters were being thrown open and people were shouting excited
-questions at each other. Distantly at first, but growing in volume, was
-another sound--an ugly one--the sound of an approaching, angry mob.
-Leonardo, holding a roll of drawings closer under his arm, stopped and
-listened.
-
-Suddenly the questioning voices stopped. The bells continued ringing and
-now the angry shouts of the mob could be heard.
-
-"Lorenzo is dead! Giuliano is dead! Death to traitors! Pazzi! Pazzi!"
-
-"On to the Palace of the Signoria! They've captured the Archbishop! He's
-a prisoner there!"
-
-"Get a ram and we'll break the door down!"
-
-The people in the street were caught up in the surging mass. Already
-soldiers of the Medici were spreading out through the city. Cobblestones
-were ripped from the street, and swords, knives, and clubs were being
-brandished in the air.
-
-Leonardo, backed against a wall of a house, was soon left in an almost
-deserted street. Still holding the drawings, he made his way carefully
-back to his studio.
-
-As it turned out, Lorenzo was not dead at all.
-
-It was on this Sunday that the Pazzi conspiracy had broken out in
-Florence. In the cathedral, the ailing Giuliano de' Medici, brother of
-Lorenzo, was killed by assassins. Lorenzo himself escaped with only a
-scratched arm. The Pazzi family were rival bankers of the Medicis and
-had joined in this plot with Girolamo Riario, a relative of Pope Sixtus
-IV, and Francesco Salviati, a long-time enemy of Lorenzo. A hired
-professional thug completed the members of the conspiracy.
-
-Girolamo Riario hated the Medicis because they refused him money for his
-own ambitions, and the Pope opposed Lorenzo because Lorenzo was
-supporting raids against papal territory. As for Archbishop Salviati, he
-had for years nursed a personal hatred for Lorenzo.
-
- [Illustration: _Leonardo, backed against a wall, was soon left in an
- almost deserted street._]
-
-When the assassination attempt failed, the Archbishop and Francesco de'
-Pazzi fled to the Palace of the Signoria for protection. However, the
-members of the Council of Florence, who were meeting, then became
-suspicious and bolted the doors after them. Both men were later killed
-by the Medici followers and their bodies were hung from the barred
-windows of the Palace. In the terror of the days afterward, eighty
-victims lost their lives. The Pazzi conspiracy also had an effect on
-Leonardo's future, as we shall see later on.
-
-Leonardo had been on his way to the Palace that morning. He had been
-given his first painting assignment, or commission, the previous
-January. This was to paint an altarpiece for the chapel of San Bernardo
-in the Palace, and just the month before he had received the sum of
-twenty-five florins as a partial payment.
-
-Some time before January of 1478, Leonardo had left Verrochio and had
-found a place of his own. The commission had come to Leonardo through
-the influence of his father, who was now one of the leading notaries, or
-lawyers, of the city. Though still poor, Leonardo could now devote this
-new independence to his widening fields of study.
-
-Leonardo's studio was like his childhood room in one respect--it was
-still filled with all the different things that had aroused his
-curiosity. Books were everywhere--on his tables and shelves and piled on
-the floor--books by Ptolemy, Pliny, and Strabo on geography and natural
-history, by Aristotle on physics, even one by Guido, a tenth-century
-monk, who has been called the father of modern music. In addition, there
-were books on arithmetic, agriculture, geometry, grammar, philosophy,
-fables, poetry and even one containing jokes. A map of the world hung on
-the wall, together with his drawings; and, scattered throughout the
-whole studio were the plants, fossils, rocks and animal skeletons he was
-still collecting from his trips into the country.
-
-There was also a huge table extending down the middle of Leonardo's
-studio upon which were many drawings and instruments for working
-geometrical problems. His easel near the window supported a painting--a
-study for his commission in the Palazzo. And on his desk was a confusion
-of papers containing notes all written in his "secret" writing.
-
-At twenty-six Leonardo was deep in the study of mechanical law,
-geometry, and botany. For example, he had observed the rings in trees
-and their relationship to the age of the trees. In mechanics, he was
-absorbed in drawing models of a "variable speed drive." By meshing three
-cogged wheels of different diameters to a common lantern wheel, Leonardo
-saw that different speeds of rotation could be obtained at the same
-time. This same principle is used in the gear shift of modern
-automobiles. About mechanics Leonardo wrote that it was "the paradise of
-the mathematical sciences because by means of it one comes to the fruit
-of mathematics."
-
-Now, too, he was starting to write about his observations on the flight
-of birds, the formations of clouds and the behavior of smoke in the air.
-He compared the flying of birds to the swimming of fish in the sea, and
-the flow of air to the flow of water. Two hundred years before Newton,
-Leonardo would define the principles of aerodynamic reciprocity, as
-contained in Newton's Third Law of Motion.
-
-At this time, Leonardo had an idea for making the Arno river navigable
-all the way from Florence to Pisa by the addition of canals, thus giving
-Florence an outlet to the sea. He also had thoughts for the improvement
-of irrigation in order to make use of land that did not have enough
-water. Nothing that Leonardo saw in his day's activities was too small
-to pass unnoticed and unquestioned. The flight of a butterfly, the
-stratification of rock in a cliffside, the shape of a mighty cumulus
-cloud, the turning of a carriage wheel on a bumpy road, the play of
-muscles in a farmer's back, the curling of water around a rock in a
-stream--all of these aroused Leonardo's curiosity. Continually, he
-studied these things and painstakingly drew them and wrote about them in
-his notebooks.
-
-
-Unfortunately, Leonardo's painting commission for the Palace of the
-Signoria was never completed. By the end of the year 1478, the Pope,
-angered by the killing of the Archbishop during the Pazzi conspiracy,
-had declared war on the Republic of Florence. Ferdinand, the King of
-Naples, was persuaded to help in this war against Florence and the
-Medicis. As the papal forces were approaching the fortresses on the
-Florentine hills, the Council of Florence discontinued Leonardo's
-commission in order to conserve money for the defense of the city.
-
-Disappointed though he was, Leonardo did not allow this setback to
-discourage him. From a page of drawings in the Uffizi Gallery of
-Florence on which are sketched various arms and war materials, we learn
-that he turned from his artistic to his mechanical skills and began
-designing engines of war. Besides being a Florentine concerned with the
-defense of his city, Leonardo was eager to gain an appointment with
-Lorenzo as military engineer to make up for the painting commission he
-had just lost. Also, as the fifteenth century was a turning point in the
-methods of waging war, Leonardo was attracted to all the mechanical
-possibilities of the new artillery. Before then soldiers had used
-spears, bows and arrows, and stone-throwing catapults, among other
-primitive methods. One of Leonardo's designs included a light cannon
-whose barrel could be raised or lowered to proper elevation by means of
-a hand-cranked screw and whose horizontal direction could be determined
-by a maneuverable cradle.
-
-The military appointment that Leonardo hoped for didn't come.
-Unfortunately for the Medicis, the war with the papal forces was being
-lost. One by one, the fortresses under siege surrendered; more and more
-of the Florentine troops were fleeing.
-
-Leonardo continued the work on his military machines for, although he
-was having some success painting Madonnas for private homes and had even
-received a commission from the King of Portugal for a tapestry design,
-he still wanted official recognition for his inventions from Lorenzo de'
-Medici.
-
-During these weeks late in the year of 1479, Leonardo conceived many
-ingenious devices to wage war. Besides the small artillery piece, he
-designed a _bombard_, or rock-throwing cannon, which did not recoil when
-it was fired. This was followed by a light gun arranged in three tiers
-of barrels, mounted so that while one tier was fired, the second was
-being loaded and the third was cooling (a forerunner of the modern
-machine gun). Another was a device to repel enemy ladders. It consisted
-of a horizontal beam laid parallel to the top of a fortress wall; the
-beam could be pushed outward by one man or several men using a system of
-pulleys.
-
- [Illustration: _Leonardo's design for a machine gun. It had
- thirty-three barrels in three banks of eleven each. While one bank
- was fired, one cooled and the other was reloaded._]
-
-Unfortunately for Leonardo, just as he was ready to show these
-inventions to Lorenzo de' Medici, the last fortress outside Florence
-surrendered and a three-month truce followed. Lorenzo himself went to
-Naples and persuaded King Ferdinand to withdraw from the war. By 1480,
-peace returned once again to Florence.
-
-As for the Medicis, military machines no longer interested them. Greatly
-disappointed at not having his inventions used--or even looked
-at--Leonardo began to search about for new fields of creative activity.
-
-
-
-
- 4
- _Years Of Frustration_
-
-
-The old monk spread the papers out before him on the table.
-
-"Master Leonardo," he said, "these are the terms of the commission. We
-at the monastery wish to have an altarpiece painted for our chapel. Your
-father has recommended you, and, as you know, he is our lawyer. Of
-course your reputation has already reached our ears, and we are
-satisfied in our choice."
-
-The year was 1480. The monk represented the monastery of San Donato a
-Scopeto near the Porta Romana, just outside Florence. Leonardo shook his
-head slowly at the terms of the commission. The painting had to be
-completed in thirty months at the most. Moreover, he must pay for his
-own colors and even--Leonardo looked up as if to protest but resumed
-reading--even pay for any gold or gold leaf he might use. Nevertheless,
-it was an opportunity, and Leonardo needed work. Since the papal war had
-ended, he had not received any commissions--and his skill at military
-engineering was still too unknown to have won him recognition.
-
-Although Lorenzo de' Medici was a great supporter of the arts and
-sciences, he had not granted Leonardo any of his patronage. In Lorenzo's
-court were many men with much book-learning but little talent. They
-guarded their positions jealously and kept the way to Lorenzo barred to
-any applicant whom they did not like. Of them, Leonardo wrote in his
-notes: "They strut about puffed up and pompous, decked out and adorned,
-not with their own labors, but by those of others, and they will not
-even allow me my own. And if they despise me who am an inventor, how
-much more blame be given to themselves, who are not inventors but
-trumpeters and reciters of the work of others?"
-
-In accepting the commission to paint the altarpiece, Leonardo hoped to
-attract attention to himself. Perhaps then Lorenzo might welcome him to
-his court and grant him patronage. So, with his usual thoroughness,
-Leonardo set about the task of preparing an Adoration of the Magi--a
-favorite subject of that time. This was to be a picture of the Holy
-Family surrounded by the three wise men from the East, shepherds and
-animals, old and young, rich and poor, paying their adoration to the
-Christ child.
-
-Since he wanted his subjects perfect in every detail, Leonardo set about
-drawing countless youths, old men, sheep, oxen, horses, and donkeys. In
-a separate drawing for the background, he worked out with mathematical
-mastery the problems of perspective, that is, drawing objects to make
-them appear three-dimensional and either close or far away in space. In
-addition, he made studies for the composition of the whole
-picture--studies in which his knowledge of geometry was used to heighten
-the excitement of this great religious subject.
-
- [Illustration: _Leonardo's hygrometer._]
-
-Among these sketches that Leonardo made for his "Adoration of the Magi"
-is a page on which appears an inspiration for one of his greatest
-masterpieces--a drawing of the "Last Supper." And on this same page is
-another drawing--one of a hygrometer. A hygrometer is an instrument for
-measuring the amount of moisture in the air. Leonardo's design consists
-of a simple, graded disk with a balanced pointer, weighted at one end
-with sand and at the other with a sponge or some salt. As the sponge or
-salt absorbed the moisture in the air, the added weight was indicated on
-the graded disk, thus measuring the amount of humidity.
-
-Leonardo's researches for the altar painting took him almost a year.
-Although the monks began to grumble at his slowness, Leonardo would not
-be hurried. He was determined to produce a painting that was perfect in
-all respects. To quiet their impatience Leonardo did odd jobs for them
-in the cloister. He repainted their old clock and for this extra work
-they advanced him some much-needed money. In March of 1481 Leonardo was
-ready to begin the actual drawing for the altarpiece. As he progressed
-with the composition, the monks crowded around with exclamations of
-delight. So different was it from all the other Adoration pictures they
-had ever seen, that the monks sent Leonardo some sacks of corn as a
-token of their appreciation.
-
-One day, Leonardo was walking slowly toward the monastery over the Ponte
-Vecchio--the Old Bridge--across the Arno River. He made his way slowly
-up the hill past the construction for the new Pitti Palace. The morning
-was hot and the farmers moving into the city with their heavily laden
-carts were short-tempered. Leonardo stood to one side as he watched a
-pair of oxen straining to haul a wagon up a rise in the road. Their
-owner, his shirt unbuttoned to the waist, was shouting angrily, lashing
-the animals with his leather-thonged whip. It was a cruel sight and
-Leonardo turned away. From some experiments he had been making, Leonardo
-realized that the poor animals were struggling not only with the hill,
-but the drag of friction on the creaking axle. This drag could be eased,
-he thought to himself, by simply resting the axle in two sets of
-roller-bearings attached to the bottom of the cart near each wheel. In
-his mind he formed the plan for such a model as he made his way to the
-monastery.
-
-The drawing of the altarpiece was nearing completion. The monks were
-fascinated by the spectacle of the Adoration appearing before their
-eyes. The soft, umber outlines deepened with gray, the ochre
-highlighting the central figures charmed them and they sent another gift
-to Leonardo's house--a cask of Tuscan red wine.
-
-
-As it turned out, Leonardo never finished this altarpiece. It is not
-known why. But the drawing for it can be seen today in the Uffizi
-Gallery in Florence just as Leonardo left it.
-
-It is certain, however, that Leonardo was far from idle during this
-time. He drew the design for eliminating the friction of a turning axle
-by mounting the axle in roller-bearings. He experimented with, and
-solved the problem of, transmitting motion to revolving machine parts by
-friction--the possible forerunner of our modern friction clutch. Another
-device, found in modern automobiles--the differential--was also drawn by
-Leonardo. This idea provided for the difference in speed between the two
-drive wheels when rounding a curve.
-
-Leonardo also drew the first known plans for a self-propelled
-vehicle--an "automobile." It was designed to operate by a system of
-elastic springs wound by hand by the person on the vehicle; the "car"
-was then supposed to run the short distance allowed it by the unwinding
-of the springs.
-
-In addition, Leonardo continued designing machines for both offensive
-and defensive military action. One of these was a breech-loading cannon,
-together with the first known projectiles that took into consideration
-better penetration through the air and greater stability in their
-trajectory. Indeed, these very much resembled present-day aerial bombs,
-with pointed noses and stabilizing fins.
-
-As the months passed, however, Leonardo began to feel that his time and
-talents were being wasted in Florence. Although the monks and friends of
-the monastery were pleased with the work he was doing, other artists
-were being called to greater tasks in Rome. For example, Domenico di
-Tommaso del Ghirlandaio, Sandro Botticelli, and even Leonardo's fellow
-student, Pietro Perugino, had left Florence to work in the chapel of
-Pope Sixtus IV in Rome--known to us as the Sistine Chapel. Now, too, it
-was becoming clear that Lorenzo and his court had no time for this
-solitary genius whose ideas stretched beyond his age.
-
-So Leonardo looked about him. He was thirty years old and the walls of
-Florence seemed to bind his spirit. To what city could he go where his
-talents would be put to fruitful use? Rome seemed to hold out no hope,
-for no one had offered him a position there.
-
-But Leonardo remembered that there had been a visitor to the Medicis
-from another city in recent months. This man was Ludovico Sforza, the
-ruling prince of Milan, the great city-state of the north. Ludovico, who
-was also called "Il Moro" (the Moor) because of his dark complexion, was
-seeking the friendship and alliance of the Medicis. He was fascinated
-with the art and culture of Florence and sought to gather to his own
-court of Milan as many artists, scientists, philosophers, and musicians
-as he could.
-
-Perhaps, thought Leonardo, his future lay in Milan. So he began
-collecting his countless drawings, diagrams of machines and instruments
-of war, his notes, his plans for canals and irrigation--even a drawing
-for a monument that he knew Ludovico wanted to erect to his father--and
-made a package of it to send to Ludovico. Then he sat down to write a
-letter to that nobleman. In it he set forth in ten numbered paragraphs
-his qualifications as military and naval engineer, architect, and
-hydraulics expert. Almost as an afterthought to the tenth item, he
-wrote: "I can carry out sculpture in marble, bronze, or clay, and also I
-can do in painting whatever may be done, as well as any other, be he who
-he may."
-
-When he had finished the letter, Leonardo took out a strange instrument.
-It was a lyre of silver in the shape of a horse's head. He had designed
-it himself, and now with an air of peace, he commenced to play. Its rich
-tone was sweet to hear and the music was his own composition.
-
-Leonardo had also designed other instruments--lyres, lutes, viols, and a
-kind of zither. He had perfected the single-stringed monochord of
-Pythagoras, replacing the tablet of wood with thin strips of drum that
-gave the instrument a low or high note according to the tightness of the
-string. In addition, he introduced stops or small pistons in the holes
-of wooden reed instruments; and, he had even invented a set of
-mechanical chords by using a wheel of reeds which plucked a set of
-strings as it was turned. His skill as a musician, composer, and singer
-was well known among his friends and his bass voice had retained the
-pureness of his boyhood.
-
-As it happened, news of Leonardo's silver lyre had reached Lorenzo de'
-Medici. All Leonardo's paintings, all his designs for cannons and
-fortifications, all his inventions for commercial machinery had failed
-to interest Lorenzo--yet this single musical oddity excited the ruler's
-curiosity. Leonardo was summoned to the Medici palace.
-
-Lorenzo was enchanted both by the instrument and Leonardo's musical
-talent. When Leonardo had finished playing, Lorenzo, surrounded by
-members of his court, applauded and said,
-
-"It would please us if Master Leonardo da Vinci would present us with
-this beautiful instrument so that we, in turn, could make a gift of it
-to His Highness, Ludovico Sforza, of Milan."
-
-Leonardo bowed and replied,
-
-"Your Grace's request is my pleasure. Moreover, Sire, it would further
-that pleasure to bear the gift myself to His Excellency in Milan."
-
-The idea delighted Lorenzo. He immediately directed that Leonardo be
-given a letter to Ludovico and that every protection be given Leonardo
-for his journey.
-
-Leonardo, with the silver lyre and the letter of recommendation, hurried
-home to make his final preparations. He called on a friend and pupil,
-young Atalante Migliorotti, to accompany him.
-
-Toward the end of 1482 or the beginning of 1483, with the letter to
-Ludovico folded in a leather pouch, Leonardo and Atalante mounted their
-horses and left Florence for the long journey to Milan.
-
-
-
-
- 5
- _Milan_
-
-
-Milan at this time was one of the greatest and wealthiest city-states in
-all Europe. Its battlements and the spires of its mighty cathedral rose
-impressively from the lush plain of Lombardy. Towering over the city in
-the distance were the snow-capped peaks of the Alps. Groves of mulberry
-trees for the production of its famous silk industry and vast stretches
-of rice paddies extended far into the surrounding countryside.
-
-Leonardo and Atalante rode along the embankment of one of the many
-canals. The sight of the city hastened their pace although the journey
-had been a long one. Frequently on the trip Leonardo had stopped to make
-notes. Riding over the mountains and ravines surrounding Florence he had
-drawn some of the rushing streams and the stratifications of exposed
-cliffs. And when they had descended to the plains he observed the
-irrigation ditches and made notes on ways of improving the crude systems
-of dams and waterwheels.
-
-Leonardo was excited by this new city and by his prospects at the court
-of Ludovico. On the way to his lodgings, he also noticed that Milan was
-a great center of arms manufacture. Shop after shop displayed its wares
-of swords, spears, shields, armor for man and horse, and signs
-advertising foundries for the making of cannon. Perhaps here he might
-find an outlet for his military inventions.
-
-In the inn where he and Atalante stayed, Leonardo overheard the current
-political rumors. All around him was talk of the war. Girolamo Riario
-was again in the field, and Ludovico's ally, Alfonso of Calabria, had
-just been defeated by the Venetians in a bloody battle at Campo Morto.
-
-Leonardo reread the letter he had written setting forth his own
-accomplishments and decided that now was the time to present himself as
-a military engineer. He would minimize the bronze monument, his music,
-and his painting, and instead, he would stress his skills in the
-inventions of war.
-
-When Leonardo appeared before Ludovico, he was a handsome young man of
-thirty-one. Tall and strong, he was dressed not according to fashion,
-but simply--almost severely. His hair hung in curls on his shoulders and
-his auburn mustache and neatly trimmed beard accented his ruddy
-complexion and deep-set blue eyes. Indeed, he presented a striking
-contrast to the nobleman seated before him. Il Moro, with his dark skin
-and straight black hair, his richly embroidered doublet with its broad
-sleeves and the heavy gold chains across his thick chest, was the exact
-opposite of Leonardo.
-
-Ludovico set aside Leonardo's letter, rose from his chair, and walked to
-the heavy table on which Leonardo had spread out his drawings.
-
-Plans for all manner of war machines were there--those that Leonardo had
-designed for Lorenzo de' Medici without success, together with many new
-additions. For example, there were plans for a self-propelled bomb with
-flames to be shot out in all directions--a bomb that was later to be
-called a "rotatory rocket" when it was actually invented in 1846.
-Leonardo also explained to Ludovico his idea for "poison gas" bombs
-containing sulfur: the fumes of these bombs would "produce stupor," and
-they could be used both on land and sea, together with masks to protect
-those who were using them. Shrapnel shells, hand grenades, and javelins
-that burst into flame when they struck their objectives--these and many
-more were among his ideas.
-
-But perhaps the most unusual to Ludovico's eyes was the design for an
-armored vehicle. It was shaped like a giant turtle, with overlapping
-sheets of reinforced wood so that enemy shells would bounce off its
-surface. The armor was pierced by loopholes for the breech-loading
-cannon and there was an opening at the top for ventilation. Power for
-the vehicle was supplied by eight men inside turning cranks which in
-turn were cogged to other wheels, setting in motion the four drive
-wheels. This of course was the forerunner of the tank and the armored
-car used in modern warfare.
-
- [Illustration: _Forerunner of the tank or armored car, as conceived
- by Leonardo. Motion was supposed to be supplied by four cogged
- wheels turned by manpower. Sheets of reinforced wood were supposed
- to serve as "armor" against enemy projectiles._]
-
-In addition, Leonardo laid before Ludovico all manner of cannons and
-designs for tunneling under the enemy's defenses. Actually, with respect
-to warfare itself, Leonardo called it a most brutal "madness"; however,
-he recognized the necessity of being prepared. In his notebook, he
-wrote, "When besieged by ambitious tyrants I find a means of offense and
-defense in order to preserve the chief gift of nature, which is
-liberty."
-
-Ludovico was very much interested in the things Leonardo had showed him.
-Although he was a man of limited imagination and was not able to grasp
-the scope of Leonardo's proposals, he was nevertheless involved in a
-war. Since Ludovico's aging military engineer was to be replaced,
-Leonardo left the forbidding castle of the Sforzas with high hopes of
-getting the position.
-
-In the meantime, he was commissioned to paint the portrait of a young
-girl from a noble family in Milan. At the same time, he began the bronze
-equestrian statue of Ludovico's father, Francesco Sforza. For this work,
-he began an intensive study of horses. Since hunting was the popular
-sport at the court of the Sforzas, Ludovico owned a stable of the finest
-Arabian horses, and here Leonardo commenced his drawings. Again, his
-research for a work of art led him beyond just making preparatory
-sketches. His studies developed into notes, and his notes into a planned
-book on the anatomy of the horse.
-
-During these months of waiting for the appointment as military engineer,
-Leonardo furthered his experiments with cannon. In the course of these
-experiments, he came across a power that would later revolutionize all
-industry--steam. He devised--although he attributed the original idea to
-Archimedes--a water vessel connected to a copper tube which was heated
-by a fire. The water when flowing into the red-hot tube changed into
-steam and the pressure of the steam blew out a ball at the mouth of the
-tube with great force. Leonardo experimented with steam in other ways.
-He built an apparatus for measuring the transformation of water into
-vapor. It consisted of a metal box in which was a thin animal bladder
-partly filled with water. Resting on the top of the bladder was a flat
-lid attached by a cord hung from two pulleys to a counterweight on the
-outside. As the water was heated, the steam in the bladder pushed up the
-lid. As the lid rose both the volume and the pressure could be measured.
-There were distillation experiments with various condensers, one in
-particular that anticipated the modern condenser of Leibig, introducing
-double walls that formed a complete jacket for cooling with water in
-continual circulation.
-
-Not content with having an idle moment, Leonardo again turned to
-searching out books that he had not read and trying to fill the gaps in
-his education. He became especially interested in the German
-philosopher, Cardinal Cusanus. Cusanus, like himself, had been
-influenced by Toscanelli and was a man devoted to the natural sciences.
-Leonardo also studied the philosophy of Aristotle and the writings of
-St. Augustine. Throughout his life Leonardo believed in an active mind
-for, as "iron rusts from disuse, stagnant water loses its purity and in
-cold weather becomes frozen, even so does inaction sap the vigor of the
-mind."
-
-Unfortunately, the post of military engineer went to a man named
-Ambrogio Ferrari. The extent and variety of Leonardo's proposals were
-too great for Ludovico to trust. He did not believe that one man could
-possibly bring all those ideas into being. Ferrari, on the other hand,
-was a military engineer only, and a man who was content with the
-customary methods of warfare. Furthermore, Ludovico had at last decided
-that peaceful negotiations would gain him more than fighting. Thus
-Leonardo's chance of recognition was again postponed.
-
-Meanwhile, the money that Leonardo had brought with him from Florence
-was almost gone. He had been forced to move from his apartment to a
-single room and now he was barely able to live from day to day. Although
-the court of Ludovico Sforza was one of the richest in the world,
-artists were frequently treated as servants; often they were the last to
-be paid for their services. Also, Leonardo was a foreigner in the city,
-which meant he was regarded with suspicion.
-
-Because of these reasons, Leonardo finally decided to do what the
-Milanese artists did--they banded together in groups sharing work and
-costs. Leonardo had met a young artist of twenty-eight, Giovanni
-Ambrogio de Predis, at the court of Ludovico. Ambrogio was court painter
-to the Sforza family and had achieved some success. Ambrogio recognized
-in the handsome stranger from Florence, however, the touch of genius,
-and he realized that his own talents would be furthered by learning from
-Leonardo. The two young men decided to pool their abilities. Ambrogio
-offered both lodging and a studio; and, in association with his two
-half-brothers, one a woodcarver, another a miniaturist, and his elder
-brother, a minter of coins, they would not lack for commissions.
-
-Commissions weren't long in coming. On April 25, 1483, a contract was
-signed between Bartolommeo degli Scarlione, a prior of the Fraternity of
-the Immaculate Conception, and Ambrogio and Leonardo for an altarpiece.
-The fee was two hundred ducats, with a promise of more if it were
-delivered on time and was satisfactory to the Fraternity. Delivery date
-was to be December 8, 1484. Ambrogio was to paint the altar wings and
-Leonardo the center piece--a picture of the Blessed Virgin and Child.
-
-But when the painting was finished, it was not according to the
-instructions set forth in the contract. Leonardo had too independent a
-mind to be bound by conformity. Nor was it completed on time. Indeed,
-for twenty years the quarrel between the Fraternity and the painters
-went on. After ten years, Ludovico was asked to intervene for the money
-owed; after he failed, another ten years went by and the King of France
-himself was finally asked to settle the dispute. Leonardo wanted his one
-hundred ducats and the Fraternity offered twenty-five. Eventually, a
-secret agreement was arrived at and the painting was restored to
-Leonardo and Ambrogio. Leonardo's painting, the masterpiece entitled the
-"Virgin of the Rocks," now hangs in the museum of the Louvre in Paris.
-
-The day this contract was signed, Leonardo walked back through the city
-to Ambrogio's studio near the Ticino gate. He was low in spirits from
-reading the petty instructions of the contract, and, in this mood, he
-became aware of the city streets and crowds about him. The noise, the
-confusion, the smells--yes, the smells were the worst. Garbage, filth,
-and dust were in heaps where the last rainwater had left them and they
-buzzed with flies.
-
-Moreover the houses were jammed together and shopkeepers crowded their
-wares to the edges of the streets, leaving just enough room for the
-occasional horseman to get through. Latrines were only for the better
-houses; here, the streets, alleys and even open doorways were toilets.
-People flung their scraps out of the window and at night in the poorly
-lit streets could be heard the scurrying of rats. Leonardo stopped,
-thinking half aloud:
-
-"Two levels. Streets running one above the other--one for pedestrians
-and one for carts and horses. Yes, and cutting through the whole city a
-system of canals to carry the city's waste to a river or to the sea. Why
-not even ten cities of, say, five thousand houses in each--say, no more
-than thirty thousand people to a city?"
-
-Intent now on his thoughts he hurried to his home, his mind busy with
-his visions of new cities.
-
-
-During the years 1484 and 1485 the bubonic plague swept Italy--the same
-dreaded Black Death so prevalent in medieval times. Milan was one of the
-cities most severely stricken. Every courtyard became a hospital and the
-streets were deserted except for the rumbling carts picking up the dead.
-On the roads from the city were lines of refugees fleeing to the
-country. Surrounding cities that had not been infected manned their
-fortress walls as in wartime to keep the fleeing populations out.
-
-Ludovico at first tried to protect Milan from the spread of the disease;
-then, frightened, he and his court fled. Even the ruler's official
-documents had to be "disinfected" by perfume and then held for a period
-of time before he would allow them near him.
-
-Leonardo, sensing opportunity, drew out his plans for his new cities.
-Canals running through them were to be used for barges and the
-underground conduits greatly resembled those of modern sewage systems.
-Paths were to have gutters for the adequate drainage of the streets.
-Public toilets were to be installed. Leonardo even had plans for the
-control of smoke collecting over the city--by sending it up tall
-chimneys where it was picked up by fans and driven away over the roofs.
-The widths of the streets were to be in proportion to the heights of the
-houses--light and air would circulate freely. Two levels would be
-connected by graceful ramps--the lower level for the commercial traffic
-and the upper level for the pedestrians. Where stairs were used they
-were designed so one could ascend or descend without one person seeing
-the other. Stables were devised so that animals were fed through
-openings in their mangers and under these were tunnels of flowing water
-for the removal of waste.
-
- [Illustration: _The results of the bubonic plague in Italy, 1484-85.
- Streets were deserted except for the carts picking up the dead._]
-
-These sweeping plans Leonardo laid before Ludovico when the epidemic had
-subsided. But Ludovico, once his fear was overcome, brushed them aside
-as impossible dreams.
-
-So Leonardo returned to the commission for the Fraternity and the
-designs for the bronze monument of Francesco Sforza. These jobs kept
-Leonardo from brooding about his rejections.
-
-Often, too, Leonardo worked with Bernardino de Predis, the elder brother
-of Ambrogio. Bernardino was a minter of coins. As Leonardo watched him
-at the laborious task of first cutting disks from ingots and then
-hammering the design into the hot metal, he suggested to Bernardino an
-easier method, then used in Germany. This was to prepare smooth ribbons
-of metal of the desired thickness and with a punch, impress the design
-into the ribbon at the necessary intervals and then, punch out the coin.
-Leonardo went on to improve this system by designing precise punches for
-both faces of the coin. A single machine then cut out and stamped the
-coins, using a falling weight raised by little winches. This machine was
-later destined for the Vatican mint in Rome.
-
-On March 26, 1485 an event occurred in Milan that was viewed with
-mingled fear, superstition, curiosity and excitement. There was a total
-eclipse of the sun. To some, coming as it did so soon after the plague,
-it was a judgment of God; to others, it was regarded as an omen--a sign
-for astrologers to use for predicting the future.
-
-But to Leonardo the eclipse was a moment of great scientific importance.
-At this time in history, the Ptolemaic, or geocentric theory of the
-universe was the popular belief. This theory taught that the earth is
-fixed and the sun and moon revolve around it. Leonardo himself had
-believed this theory for a long time. As he grew older, however, he read
-and heard discussions of the heliocentric theory. This theory proposed
-that the sun is fixed and the earth and stars move around it. Now, as he
-watched the eclipse, his doubts of the Ptolemaic concept were renewed
-and he resolved to make experiments of his own. The new theory was so
-daring for his times, however, that it would be many years before he
-became convinced of its truth.
-
-Later that night, deep in thought over the experience of the day, he
-noted down his observations of the eclipse and his doubts of the
-medieval concept of the heavens. The Church believed the earth was the
-fixed center of the universe. Scholars and scientists supported the
-belief of Aristotle in the four elements, earth, water, air, and
-fire--but something was wrong. What were the planets--what was the moon?
-He picked up his pen and on a clean sheet of paper he wrote, "Make
-glasses in order to see the moon large."
-
-
-
-
- 6
- _The Monument_
-
-
-During this time, Leonardo had been struggling with the design for the
-bronze equestrian statue. Drawing after drawing lay scattered on his
-studio floor. Lately, however, a daring plan for this statue had come to
-him. It was to be a huge bronze warrior, Francesco Sforza, mounted on a
-rearing horse. Weighing perhaps a hundred thousand pounds, it was to be
-cast in sections in five furnaces--a fitting monument to the power of
-the Sforza family. But there still remained a big problem to be solved:
-how could he balance the plunging horse and man on just the two rear
-legs of the horse?
-
-Meanwhile, Leonardo had another problem to work on--a wooden model of
-the Milan cathedral. He had entered his name with the cathedral
-authorities as a competitor in the design and construction of the
-cathedral's dome. Many architects had been brought in and had failed,
-partly because of the antagonism of the Milanese workmen to foreign
-craftsmen, and partly because the committee found it difficult to decide
-what designs it liked. Leonardo had sent them a letter outlining his own
-recommendations and had drawn many pages of possible plans. He put
-forward his knowledge of various building materials, his understanding
-of classical architecture, and his wish to keep his own ideas in harmony
-with the Gothic tradition of the cathedral itself. Often he would make a
-point of walking about the city, observing the different constructions
-under way and drawing up plans to shorten the labor by mechanical means.
-
-In July of 1487 Leonardo received a payment from the cathedral
-authorities for the wooden model he had submitted. Still, however, no
-final decision had been reached. Now, as Leonardo looked at the model in
-his studio, he felt the urge to improve it further--to make it more
-perfect. Yet he held his impatience in check and decided he would wait a
-little longer. Instead, he decided to work on some of his ideas for
-construction devices. He had already made many drawings, but they could
-be improved, he thought, and he began to make calculations.
-
-Among these notes and drawings was an improvement on a device for the
-raising of columns. It was a mobile windlass with a transmission gear
-for transporting and erecting columns and obelisks. Another device was
-an earth drill resembling a modern corkscrew with double handle bars.
-The upper bar, when turned, drilled the screw into the earth while the
-lower bar--when turned the opposite way--carried the dirt up and out.
-Also there was a double crane mounted on a circular trolley which
-carried the dirt of excavation up and then the crane was moved around on
-its trolley so the dirt could be unloaded in different directions.
-
-Other labor-saving devices that Leonardo designed were an automatic pile
-driver, the weight of which was raised by a winch and tripped
-automatically at its height to fall on the piling; a lift for raising
-iron bells to bell towers; and a machine for boring tree trunks to make
-pipes for carrying water.
-
-In the fall of 1488, Leonardo was interrupted by a summons from
-Ludovico, who wanted him to design and build the decorations for the
-forthcoming marriage of his nephew, young Duke Gian Galeazzo Sforza, to
-Isabella of Aragon, granddaughter of the King of Naples. He worked on
-this steadily until the wedding ceremony in February of the following
-year. When the day arrived, the street from the cathedral to the grim
-castle was trimmed with flags and banners of the two royal houses. The
-inner courtyards of the castle were transformed into delicate arbors of
-laurel boughs. Yet it was the evening's reception and entertainment
-which were to be the climax and to them Leonardo had brought all his
-mechanical skill. However, the announcement of the death of the bride's
-mother cut short the celebration and, after the bride and groom had left
-for Pavia, the wedding party soon dispersed. Disappointed that his
-decorations had not been fully appreciated, Leonardo returned to his
-studio and the problem of the monument.
-
-He was still struggling with the problem of balancing the rearing horse.
-And, indeed, a solution was soon found. By placing a fallen soldier with
-his arm upraised in protection under the forefeet of the horse, Leonardo
-could balance the enormous weight and provide for the proper casting of
-the molten bronze.
-
-Finally, Leonardo made a small wax model of the proposed statue and
-showed it to Ludovico. The nobleman was impressed by its originality.
-Most of the ideas contributed by other sculptors were mere variations of
-what had already been done many times. Also, the other plans called for
-bronze of not more than two thousand pounds, while Leonardo envisioned a
-statue fifty times that size! Ludovico awarded the commission to
-Leonardo.
-
-Leonardo was to work on this commission for ten years and it was
-destined never to be immortalized in bronze, for reasons that will be
-explained later. His energies, as usual, were poured into many schemes.
-Growing out of his work on the monument he planned one book on the
-subject of casting in bronze and another on the anatomy of the horse.
-But the one subject, which he began to study in this period and which
-would occupy the remainder of his life, was the study of human anatomy.
-So Leonardo, in the midst of all his other activities, wrote in his
-notes, "On the second day of April 1489 the book entitled _Of the Human
-Figure_."
-
-The sources of anatomical study up to Leonardo's day had been the
-Greeks--Hippocrates and Galen--and the Arab--Avicenna. Books on this
-subject were few, and the anatomical diagrams were crude and inaccurate.
-Galen, for example, had based his studies on the dissection of monkeys.
-Renaissance anatomists had explained his errors by pointing out that man
-had probably changed since Galen's time. The Church had stepped in
-during the fourteenth century with an edict that was interpreted as a
-prohibition against dissection of the human body. In Italy, however,
-there were some dissections. They could only use, for this purpose, the
-bodies of criminals, slaves, and people of foreign birth. In Florence,
-anatomy was studied by the artists, and Leonardo had undoubtedly watched
-Pollaiuolo at work on a corpse that that artist had dissected.
-
-In 1489 Leonardo, from the results of his own investigation, produced
-drawings of the skull and backbone whose careful attention to detail
-are--even today--classics in art and anatomy. With infinite patience and
-with a saw of his own invention he had halved a skull and drew for the
-first time with accuracy the curves of the frontal and sphenoid bones.
-He drew the lachrymal (tear) canal, and he was the first to show the
-cavity in the superior maxillary bone--not discovered again until 1651,
-by Highmore--now named "the antrum of Highmore." He was the first to
-demonstrate the double curvature of the spine and its accompanying
-vertebrae, the inclination of the sacrum, the shape of the rib cage, and
-the true position of the pelvis. He planned a whole series of books that
-would include from head to foot and from inside to outside every section
-of the human apparatus.
-
-Meanwhile he had been working on the monument, redesigning it to conform
-to the practical needs of casting. Now it had reached an even grander
-scale--a colossus that would require two hundred thousand pounds of
-bronze! He recorded in his notes the very day that this work was
-started, "On the twenty-third day of April 1490 I commenced this book
-and recommenced the horse." The "horse," of course, was the monument and
-"this book" referred to still another subject which had grown out of his
-studies of anatomy and perspective.
-
-The title of the proposed book was to be _Light and Shade_. It would
-include the subject of optics or the mechanism of the eye, the problems
-of reflection and refraction and it would lead him eventually to a
-re-examination of his studies of the sun and moon.
-
-In Leonardo's day, and even for a long while afterwards, the popular
-belief of vision was one that had originally been put forth by the
-Platonic school and expanded by Euclid and Ptolemy. This belief was that
-the eye sent forth rays that brought back the image to the soul.
-Leonardo, in his younger days, had believed in the same theory. Not
-content with what had been written on the subject, however, he began to
-experiment for himself.
-
-These experiments led him to an examination of the eye itself. He noted
-the various parts of the eye--the optic foramen or opening, the pigment
-layer, and the iris. These were already known by the Arabs. Leonardo
-discovered, however, the crystalline area of the eye. He explained
-binocular vision, or three-dimensional images, by correctly noting the
-positions of the two eyes in the head. He described the variations in
-the diameter of the pupil according to the surrounding light. Further
-experiments with light brought him to the conclusion that light and
-images are received by the eye. He took a piece of paper, for example,
-and pierced it with a small hole. With this he looked at the source of
-light. He noted the cone shape of the rays funneling into the tiny hole
-and then when the paper was held next to a white wall he noted that the
-rays spread out again. He established that light travels in straight
-lines. He constructed the first "camera obscura"--a box with a small
-hole in it. Inside the box an object was placed near the hole and behind
-that a lighted candle. When the box was closed the image of the object
-was cast on the wall. Leonardo was already acquainted with lenses, and
-he placed a magnifying lens over the hole to create an enlarged image.
-
- [Illustration: _Leonardo's "camera obscura" which he used for
- projecting an image of an object on a wall or screen._]
-
-He also demonstrated various laws relative to optical illusion, such as
-irradiation--when a metal rod is made red-hot at one end, that end seems
-thicker than the other. A brightly lit object seems larger than one
-exactly like it that is dimly lit; a dark object placed against a light
-background seems smaller than it is; a light object seems larger than
-its real size when placed against a dark background; and the illusion of
-a light swung in a circle appears as a complete circle of light.
-
-Many years before Newton, Leonardo described the experiment of breaking
-up a ray of white light into the solar spectrum. Also he compared two
-sources of light and measured their intensity by the depth of their
-shadows accompanied by a drawing that was the forerunner of Rumford's
-photometer three centuries later! He stated the law of reflection--that
-is, that the angle of reflection is always equal to the angle of
-incidence.
-
-
-About this time Leonardo left the studio of Ambrogio de Predis and moved
-into the Sforza Castle. Ludovico had put at his disposal a studio in the
-Corte Vecchia and the use of a room in one of the towers--which Leonardo
-always kept locked. To his growing list of work, Leonardo now had to add
-the preparations for the delayed wedding reception of Ludovico's nephew,
-Gian Galeazzo Sforza.
-
-On a cold winter evening of January 1490 the guests assembled again.
-Silks, satins and gold brocade, diamonds, rubies and pearls glittered in
-the brilliant lights. Princes of the Church mingled with ambassadors of
-foreign lands. Music and perfume filled the air and as the party quieted
-down the entertainment began. There were dances in gay costumes. Poetry
-was recited that flattered the bride and groom. There were allegorical
-processions. The jokes and antics of the court jester made the audience
-laugh.
-
-Then, at midnight, the curtain that hung from wall to wall at the end of
-the ballroom was raised. Applause and cries of delight greeted the
-spectacle. The rising curtain revealed a room in which there was a
-hemisphere surrounded by the signs of the zodiac and the planets. While
-the planets in their niches flickered with concealed lights and the
-signs of the zodiac glowed, lines were spoken in honor of the house of
-Sforza to the accompaniment of a choir. The ancient gods swept down from
-the heavens, and the Virtues and Graces moved across the scene with
-nymphs waving lanterns. The music drowned out the sound of the
-mechanism. This was the kind of mechanics that Ludovico could understand
-and appreciate.
-
-The success of this entertainment so pleased Ludovico that Leonardo was
-encouraged to present another amusing idea. This one was an "alarm
-clock" and it utilized what we call today the mechanical relay
-principle. When a small power is suddenly switched over, the power is
-reinforced. The "alarm" clock worked by placing a shallow basin of water
-at one end of a tubed lever. At the other end was another empty basin.
-Water was led drop by drop into the second basin and as this slowly
-filled the increasing weight lowered the lever. The shallow basin of
-water at the first end was suddenly emptied and the immediate switch in
-weight flipped the lever up and this in turn pushed up the sleeper's
-feet.
-
-
-Leonardo decided to withdraw from the competition for the cathedral
-dome. Although the cathedral authorities were pleased with his design,
-they could not decide to whom the commission should be awarded. In the
-summer of 1490 Ludovico was called upon to settle the issue and he
-decided in favor of Antonio Amadeo from Milan. But the work that
-Leonardo had done so impressed Ludovico that he sent him to Pavia in
-company with an architect from Siena, Francesco di Giorgio Martini, to
-inspect the work on the cathedral of that city. Leonardo, who had his
-own workshop and apprentices now, took along one of them, Marco
-d'Oggionno, a young boy of twenty.
-
-In Pavia one of the greatest libraries in all of Italy was in the ducal
-palace. Here Leonardo wandered among shelves of books and illuminated
-manuscripts bound in rich velvets and gold-embossed leather all bound to
-their places with silver chains. One book that he records in his notes
-was written in the thirteenth century by Witelo, a Polish scholar, who
-wrote extensively on perspective. Leonardo, by the necessity of his art,
-had solved many problems in perspective. He had invented a pair of
-proportional compasses, the forerunners of those used today for the
-transfer of a drawing from one scale to duplicate the same drawing in a
-larger scale. Leonardo had also designed in very careful detail a
-parabolic compass for drawing a parabola in one continuous movement. He
-now determined to write his own book on perspective and, as the subject
-was so close to his studies of the eye, he would entitle it
-_Introduction to Perspective, or the Function of the Eye_.
-
-Leonardo submitted a number of plans for the completion of the cathedral
-to the authorities in Pavia and then returned to Milan. He worked
-through the rest of the summer on the equestrian statue and at the same
-time he continued to expand his notes on anatomy, light and shade, and
-perspective.
-
-Late on a cold December night in 1490, Leonardo lit his lamp. This was a
-very special lamp that he had invented. It had already created a great
-deal of comment. It was so unusual, he had received an order from the
-court for another which he made with a richly carved pedestal. Candles,
-torches, and oil lamps, the only methods of artificial illumination in
-those days, were poor substitutes for light. They flickered, smoked,
-went out, and frequently caused damage with their hot drippings. As a
-side result of his experiments in light, Leonardo had put a glass
-cylinder in the middle of a larger glass globe. A wick in olive oil was
-placed in the cylinder and the outside globe was then filled with water.
-The result was a bright, steady light magnified by the water in the
-globe.
-
-He sat down by the small fire and arranged his papers in front of him.
-Then, with a glance at his lamp, he picked up his goose-quill pen and
-wrote, "No substance can be comprehended without light and shade; light
-and shade are caused by light."
-
-
-
-
- 7
- _Success_
-
-
-It was January of 1491, and a light snow had fallen in Milan, edging
-with white all the roofs, the massive spires of the cathedral and the
-red battlements of the Sforza castle. Soon Ludovico was to be married to
-Beatrice d'Este of the ducal house of Ferrara.
-
-Once more the streets of Milan echoed to the carpenters' hammers.
-Messengers rode to and from the castle and endless carts full of
-provisions pushed through the crowded city. Guests began to arrive from
-all the allied courts of Italy with their bodyguards and servants. The
-rooms of the castle, the palaces of the nobles, and even the inns were
-filling with the royal processions.
-
-Leonardo was again summoned by the court to prepare the decorations, the
-costumes for the masquerades, and the arena for the jousting
-tournaments. An invitation had been sent to all the friendly courts to
-attend these contests-at-arms. So, accompanying each new party's arrival
-was a band of armored knights, their breast-plates, helmets, and shields
-glistening in the winter sun.
-
-Leonardo enjoyed designing mechanical toys and entertaining the guests
-with them. One of these was a mechanical drum. Ordinarily most of the
-entertainment began with normal drum rolls, but Leonardo's rolls were
-made on a kind of wheelbarrow. On it was mounted an enormous drum. When
-the "wheelbarrow" was pushed, it put into motion a cogged wheel geared
-to the axle. This wheel in turn was geared to two rotary cylinders with
-pegs mounted around the top. The pegs moved against five drumsticks on
-either side of the drum and thumped out a rhythm according to the
-position of the pegs.
-
-Ludovico's marriage to Beatrice d'Este, a girl of little more than
-fifteen years, further isolated Leonardo from the court. Being almost a
-child, Beatrice loved parties and festivities, and she surrounded
-herself with people who catered to her frivolous whims. As a result so
-serious a man as Leonardo was forced into the background of the court
-life. He was called upon more and more to act as stage-designer while
-his more important work went unnoticed. Because these entertainments
-were easy for Leonardo to design, they did give him more time to work on
-his giant equestrian monument of Francesco Sforza. Working one day on
-the scaffolding surrounding the clay figure of his statue, Leonardo
-heard a knock at his studio door.
-
-"Come in," he shouted as he climbed down. "The door's open."
-
-Three peasants cautiously entered the room and quickly took off their
-caps. One of them was holding a carefully wrapped bundle.
-
-"Master Leonardo, we have brought you some shells we found on a ridge of
-Monferrato. Remember, you asked us to bring anything we found that was
-unusual?"
-
-"Yes, Pietro. Thank you. Put them here on the table."
-
-Leonardo opened the bundle. He smiled when he saw the shells. He
-remembered how, as a young boy, he had found seashells like these high
-in the mountains. Leonardo questioned Pietro and his companions as to
-where they had been found and under what circumstances. He gave them
-some coins and, when they had gone, he looked among his growing
-collection of notes and drawings on the shelves. It took some time for
-him to find what he wanted, for the pages were in such confusion.
-Finally, he sat down at the table with several of the sheets and,
-putting the seashells in front of him, he began to make notes.
-
-The shells were fossil shells but, thought Leonardo, their presence on
-the high mountains of Lombardy could hardly be attributed to the great
-flood as described in the Bible. In his notes, Leonardo cited the case
-of the cockle which, out of water, is like the snail. It makes a furrow
-in the sand and can travel in this furrow about three to four yards a
-day. By such means, he calculated, it could not possibly have reached
-Monferrato from the Adriatic in forty days (which was supposed to have
-been the duration of the flood)--a distance of 250 miles. Nor were these
-simply dead shells deposited by the waves--for the living creatures are
-recognized by being in pairs, and these in front of him had certainly
-been traveling in pairs. Consequently, they could have been left there
-only when they were alive and the mountains were covered by the primeval
-oceans. Moreover, Leonardo also described how living matter in
-prehistoric times fell into the mud and died, and how this mud, as the
-waters receded and years had passed, was changed into rock forming a
-mold about the fossil--literally making a cast of its original living
-appearance.
-
-By such deductive reasoning and the testing of the evidence before him
-against the common beliefs, Leonardo struggled to free the minds of men
-from medieval superstitions and beliefs. Indeed, these medieval
-superstitions existed everywhere. Astrologers, or men who told fortunes
-by the position of the stars at a given moment; and necromancers, those
-who by tricks of magic claimed to be able to talk to departed
-spirits--these men profited from the ignorant. The Church, with its
-preaching of devils and hells, provided the background against which
-these fakers flourished.
-
-Ludovico Sforza was himself a believer in such things. His own physician
-and astrologer was a man by the name of Ambrogio da Rosate, who had such
-influence over the court that he was given a post in the University of
-Pavia, and his fame was so great that he was called upon to predict the
-future of Pope Innocent VIII! Leonardo's dislike of these men was
-intense. He scorned the supernatural and asked men to look about them at
-the real world and the real heavens. Observation and experiment--these
-were Leonardo's key words. But he was a lonely figure in his
-thinking--like a man awake while the rest of the world slept.
-
-At last the full-size model of the Sforza monument was nearing
-completion. Ludovico had ordered it ready for exhibition in the
-courtyard of the castle for yet another marriage festival that was soon
-to take place. This time it was the marriage of his niece Bianca Maria
-to Maximilian I of Germany. Leonardo and his assistants were busy with
-the finishing touches on the monument, and with building a wagon on
-which to carry it from the studio to the courtyard.
-
-During these last months Leonardo had had to struggle with all kinds of
-heavy loads. Already he had improved on pulleys by inventing a new kind
-of tackle, and he also had utilized many kinds of levers. One of his
-simpler discoveries for raising heavy weights was a jack which, in
-appearance and principle, was the forerunner of our own automobile jack.
-
-In 1493 when the clay model of the Sforza monument was completed, it was
-put on the cart and wheeled to its place of exhibition where a curtain
-was thrown around it. Again Milan was the host to a gathering of noble
-courts, and this time Ludovico outdid himself in the display of luxury.
-Tapestries hung from the buildings and rich carpets were laid down the
-steps of the cathedral. Everything that Milan had to show was on
-exhibition--even a crocodile.
-
-But the most impressive sight of all was the unveiling of Leonardo's
-colossal statue. It rose in majesty against the red walls of the castle.
-The name of Leonardo da Vinci was suddenly on everyone's lips. As the
-word of his artistic achievement spread from city to city, messages of
-praise came pouring in. And, for a while the years of frustration and
-failure to gain recognition melted away. Leonardo at forty-one had at
-last achieved some success.
-
-Now there was a breathing spell, and Leonardo returned to some of his
-own projects. For a long time he had continued his observations of his
-two favorite elements--air and water. To him they were related in their
-movements. The birds flying in the currents of air and the fish swimming
-in the flow of water seemed very similar to him. He had already designed
-various instruments to tell him about the direction of wind and its
-velocity, and he had also commenced to analyze the wing structure of
-birds and bats. To soar through the air like a bird was an ancient dream
-of man, yet for Leonardo it had become a passion. Ceaselessly, he
-sketched the flights of birds, the flutterings of butterflies and
-analyzed their flying patterns.
-
-But to Leonardo, understanding the _dynamics_, or motion, of air was the
-most important thing. He built an _anemoscope_, an instrument like a
-weather-vane for telling the direction of the wind; and, he also
-constructed several types of _anemometers_ for measuring the velocity or
-force of the wind. One of these latter consisted of a thin rectangle of
-metal hanging straight down in front of an upward-curving wooden arc.
-This arc was marked off in units of measurement. When the wind blew, it
-pushed the thin rectangle up the arc; thus, by noting at which gradation
-it stopped, Leonardo could tell the velocity.
-
-In addition, Leonardo at this time constructed a device which has been
-compared to the modern instrument used for testing the weight-carrying
-capacity of airplane wings. He fashioned a wing resembling a bird's wing
-and attached it to a lever so that it would be possible to lower the
-wing by pushing rapidly down on the lever. This wing in turn was mounted
-on a plank that was in weight equal to that of a human being. He then
-calculated that two wings of this kind would have to be about twelve
-meters wide and twelve meters long to raise a man and his machine
-together. Another device resembling those found in airplanes today that
-Leonardo constructed was an inclination gauge. He made this by
-suspending a heavy ball on a cord within a glass bell. This ball was
-then supposed to guide the flyer by telling him whether he was flying
-level, diagonally, up, or down.
-
- [Illustration: _One of Leonardo's anemometers. The wind blew against
- the strip of metal, pushing it up the curved gauge and thereby
- measuring the force of the wind._]
-
- [Illustration: _Leonardo's inclination gauge, designed to guide a
- man in flight. The ball in the glass cylinder was supposed to tell a
- "flyer" whether or not he was flying level or tipped._]
-
-To Leonardo, water was also a phenomenon that from his youth never
-failed to excite his curiosity. The use of water power to run machines,
-to irrigate fields and to carry boats inland was a subject that he never
-ceased investigating. Out of his experiments at this time he constructed
-a device for raising water to high levels. It was based on the geometric
-spiral of Archimedes. He took a piece of gut, inflated it, and let it
-dry. Then, covering it with a coat of wax to make it waterproof, he
-wound it around a thin staff in a spiral. He put one end in a stream and
-attached it by gears to a cogged water wheel; this set the long screw to
-turning, and he was able to raise water from a low level to any height
-he desired. With a multiple system of these screws he could raise water
-in continuous circulation to the reservoirs on the highest towers.
-
-
-In the year 1494, King Charles VIII of France crossed the Alps at the
-head of an army of twenty-five thousand men. Now Ludovico, by a series
-of diplomatic maneuvers, had allied himself with Charles and had, by
-secret negotiation, actually invited the invasion. By such an alliance
-he hoped to use Charles' army to overcome the forces of the Pope which
-stood in the path of Ludovico's ambition to become the most powerful
-ruler in Italy. Outwardly Charles was asserting his rights to the
-Kingdom of Naples, but inwardly he dreamt of leading a crusade against
-the infidels in the Holy Land. At the same time young Gian Galeazzo
-Sforza, Duke of Milan, was dying. Ludovico desired this title for
-himself; however, until Galeazzo was out of the way, he could not have
-it. There were ugly rumors that young Sforza had been poisoned.
-Moreover, in 1494, the Medicis--another powerful obstacle--were expelled
-from Florence, and a republic was established.
-
-Soon young Gian Galeazzo died, leaving a son, Francesco. This son was
-the rightful heir to the Dukedom of Milan but Ludovico usurped the boy's
-claim and declared himself Duke of Milan. Now Ludovico was in a position
-to await the impending battle between Charles and the Pope.
-
-With such military and political ambitions in mind, Duke Ludovico now
-assigned Leonardo the task of reviewing Milan's defenses. Again Leonardo
-submitted to Ludovico his plans for strengthening fortresses and designs
-for new ones. The great architect Bramante was also assigned the task of
-seeing to the city's defenses, and for some time the two brilliant men
-worked together.
-
-Then, in the spring of 1494, Leonardo was sent to Vigevano where
-Ludovico's young wife was staying. This town was also the birthplace of
-Ludovico, and Leonardo was given the job of designing and building a
-small summer house and garden there for Beatrice. In addition, Leonardo
-built a kind of "air conditioner" for her bedroom. It consisted of a
-large waterwheel that cooled the air circulated into her room. Although
-this ancient device had long been known to the Greeks and Romans,
-Leonardo was the one who succeeded in perfecting it.
-
-During this time Leonardo's highly original mind was also at work on
-other devices. One of these was an _odometer_, an instrument for
-measuring the distance traversed by a vehicle. Dials, turned by a system
-of gears attached to the wheel of a wheelbarrow, measured the distance
-traveled as the barrow was pushed along the ground. In addition,
-Leonardo conceived a kind of odometer to be used at sea; this consisted
-essentially of a spinner that was towed by a ship which registered its
-speed. Leonardo even invented an automatic spit operated by metal vanes
-mounted in the chimney that revolved with the pressure of the hot air
-rising from the fire--and a pair of large floating shoes for walking on
-water!
-
-In the meantime, Charles VIII of France had marched through Rome and
-entered Naples. The conquest was without opposition. Charles was then
-crowned King of Naples and all Italy was at his feet. Yet his triumph
-was a short one. Ludovico, having used the king to get rid of his
-enemies, now plotted against the king himself. He formed an alliance
-with the Pope, Venice, Spain, and the German emperor. Charles, faced
-with this league, hastily beat a retreat to France. Fighting his way to
-the border, he there signed a peace treaty. Thus Ludovico had swept
-Italy clean of all opposition and was now the most powerful prince in
-the land.
-
-Yet Ludovico was quick to realize that his position could only be held
-by force and he set about strengthening himself and his allies. To
-provide for more cannons, a hundred and fifty thousand tons of bronze
-were sent to manufacturing works in Ferrara. This, however, included the
-very bronze Leonardo needed for the casting of his equestrian statue,
-and this is why the statue was never cast. Years of Leonardo's work now
-seemed to vanish overnight. Ludovico also needed large sums of money to
-secure friends in high places and Leonardo's own payments were suddenly
-dropped. Forced again to worry about paying for his daily bread and for
-his household and apprentices, he wrote letters to Ludovico complaining
-of his lack of funds and asking for money that was owed him for work
-done. He looked about for other commissions, but none were available.
-Moreover, because he was still court painter to Ludovico, he was ordered
-to paint the decorations of some rooms in the castle. But this was more
-than Leonardo could take--he walked off the job without finishing it.
-
-Despite all of these misfortunes, Leonardo continued struggling with the
-problems of flight. He kept working out the proportions of wing span to
-the weight of the load. Indeed, he had already started designs for a
-flying machine. He had chosen a room which was the highest in one of the
-towers of the castle and which had access to a roof. Leonardo's plans
-for a flying machine were a secret, and, with the exception of an
-assistant, no one knew about them. He made sure that he could not be
-seen by the workmen on the dome of the cathedral and proceeded to block
-off his room with beams which he planned to use as supports for his
-model.
-
-He had thought at first that any attempted flight should take place over
-water in order to cushion a possible crash--but as his plans progressed
-he designed a parachute. It was a pyramid-shaped "tent of linen"
-twenty-four feet broad and twenty-four feet high, and it is believed to
-have been successfully tried out from a tower especially constructed for
-that purpose.
-
-Since Leonardo was no longer working for Ludovico, he lived more simply
-than ever. He made regular lists of his expenses down to the last penny.
-His habits were frugal although he always kept himself neat. His meals
-were spare; he drank a little wine at meals and never ate meat. To his
-pupils and apprentices, he recommended regular habits such as not
-sleeping during midday, eating only when hungry and chewing well,
-exercising moderately, and sleeping well covered.
-
-Yet, even though Leonardo lived cheaply, he was now greatly in need of
-money. Swallowing his pride, he wrote to Ludovico, placing himself at
-the duke's service once again. His absence from court, he said, had been
-necessary so that he could earn a living. In this and other ways,
-Leonardo attempted to heal the break between them.
-
-It turned out that Ludovico was glad to have Leonardo back. Perhaps
-mindful of the fame that the model of the equestrian monument had
-brought the house of Sforza, he now commissioned Leonardo to paint a
-picture. The Dominican monastery of Santa Maria delle Grazie was the
-nearest church to the Sforza castle and a favorite retreat of Ludovico.
-Here he used to walk in the quiet garden while the white-robed monks
-silently went about their chores. In gratitude for the peace he found
-there, Ludovico had had the refectory rebuilt and on the back wall, a
-crucifixion scene had been painted by Montorfano, a Lombard. But the
-front wall was given to Leonardo. On this Leonardo decided to paint a
-picture of the Last Supper--the painting that has since become one of
-the best known in the world.
-
-
-
-
- 8
- _The French_
-
-
-The noonday sun was baking the deserted streets of Milan as Leonardo
-hurried across the drawbridge of the castle. The guard dozing in the
-entrance arch started to his feet, but when he saw who it was he sat
-down again, muttering about a madman. Taking the shortest way, Leonardo
-arrived at the monastery gate and pulled on the bellcord. When the gate
-opened Leonardo brushed past the startled monk and made directly for the
-scaffolding in the refectory. He looked at his almost completed painting
-for a moment, took a brush and mixed a color swiftly on the large
-palette. Then he climbed the scaffolding and very quickly applied three
-or four strokes. With this he sighed and smiled. Then, just as abruptly,
-he put away his brushes and, without a backward glance, he left, making
-his way back to the castle in the hot sun.
-
-For three years, Leonardo had been working this way on the "Last
-Supper."
-
-Sometimes he would work from dawn to dusk forgetting to eat; other
-times, he would stay away for days and then run back just to add a
-touch. Once he arrived and, with his arms folded across his chest, he
-stood in front of it for two hours just studying what he had done.
-
-Now, in 1498, the painting was nearing completion and the only faces
-still left blank were those of Christ and Judas. Leonardo had drawn
-hundreds of sketches, taking his models wherever he found them--once he
-sketched a man just for his hands. Now that his name had become well
-known he always had an audience while he worked. His pupils, the monks,
-visiting nobility, church officials, and frequently Ludovico himself
-watched him as he painted the "Last Supper."
-
-But Leonardo, as usual, was involved in many different tasks. He was
-supervising the installation of a hydraulic pump over seventy feet high
-beside a stream which would use the power of the stream itself to pump
-water into the castle. Mindful, too, of the uncertainty of court
-patronage, he was designing commercial machinery, hoping thereby to
-secure an income outside the court. Among the most notable of these were
-an olive press, an automatic file-cutter, a hydraulic saw, and a needle
-sharpener. This latter was a forerunner of modern sharpeners with their
-mass-production methods. With it, Leonardo dreamt of sharpening four
-hundred needles at a time, or forty thousand an hour so that in twelve
-hours one person could sharpen four hundred and eighty thousand needles!
-The needles were arranged successively on a moving belt of leather and
-brought against a rotating grindstone. This grindstone was set in such a
-way that the needles were sharpened into curvilinear points rather than
-the usual triangular points.
-
-In his travels to Vigevano and other parts of the countryside around
-Milan, Leonardo had studied flour mills. He had talked with the workmen,
-asked the prices of grain, and noted the time that it took to do the
-milling. Then he made calculations on ways to cut down the time, and, in
-fact, redesigned the entire mill. He mounted twelve cylindrical
-millstones in rows of four on one side of a canal and another twelve on
-the other side. In the canal were hydraulic wheels or paddlewheels. Each
-wheel was attached to a rod that ran underneath four millstones. Geared
-to the one rod were four grinding levers to the stones above. In this
-way it was possible to have twenty-four millstones operating at the same
-time.
-
-But most fascinating to Leonardo now was the construction of his flying
-machine. His first models involved the principle of an air-screw mounted
-on a platform on which a man stood. But where would the necessary power
-come from to lift his machine from the ground? At first he thought of
-operating his air-screw by means of a steel spring coiled around a drum,
-but this he apparently abandoned. Later, however, Leonardo did design
-another model on this principle which has been called the forerunner of
-the modern helicopter. It was to be operated by four men standing on a
-platform. Each man would hold a bar which wound a spring-driven
-mechanism, much as in a modern clockworks. The air-screw was a broad
-blade spiraling about a vertical shaft--the ancestor of the modern
-propeller.
-
-The model that Leonardo wanted to construct now, however, was of a
-different principle. Instead of an air-screw he substituted a pair of
-wings fashioned after those of the birds. There was still a platform on
-which the flyer stood and two springs were still the essential "motor"
-to raise and lower the wings. But as Leonardo worked on his apparatus he
-began to realize that it would be too much at the mercy of a sudden gust
-of wind or a violent updraft. It was necessary to return to his study of
-the air and its currents.
-
-With all of this activity in mechanical devices Leonardo had reawakened
-his interest in mathematics. During this time he was introduced to a man
-at Ludovico's court who became his friend and collaborator. He was a
-Franciscan monk named Fra Luca Pacioli who had been appointed a
-professor of mathematics by Ludovico. He, too, came from Florence, and
-in 1496, when he met Leonardo, he was forty-six years old and the author
-of _Summa di Arithmetica_, the first printed scientific work of his
-time. Pacioli was now at work on a book of geometry to be entitled _De
-Divina Proportione_ and he enlisted Leonardo's aid in drawing the plates
-for his book. As Leonardo had already made a study of human proportions,
-the association with Pacioli was of benefit to them both. Among
-Leonardo's best known drawings of human proportion is a beautifully
-rendered figure-study of a standing man with his arms at his sides and
-then outstretched, his legs together and then apart, inscribed within a
-square and a circle. It was made to illustrate a passage from Vitruvius
-on the proportions of a human figure and demonstrated, among other
-things, "the span of a man's outstretched arms is equal to his height."
-
-Moreover, Leonardo found with Pacioli confirmation of many of his own
-observations and experiments and in turn Pacioli gave to Leonardo a
-confidence in his own methods. Pacioli also helped Leonardo with his
-arithmetic, a subject that Leonardo had neglected in his impatience to
-study geometry. The association also helped to free him further from the
-cobwebs of medieval beliefs. For Pacioli, the friendship with Leonardo
-was a revelation. Although Pacioli was a learned mathematician, Leonardo
-demonstrated to him that the application of his science encompassed
-_all_ sciences--even art--for Leonardo later wrote, "Let no one read me
-who is not a mathematician...."
-
-Legend relates that Leonardo became so absorbed in his studies that the
-prior of the monastery complained to Ludovico that the "Last Supper,"
-although nearly completed, still lacked the faces of Christ and Judas.
-Ludovico summoned Leonardo to court and laid the complaint before him.
-Leonardo, however, was quick to reply.
-
-"The good prior is an esteemed man, your Grace, but he is a monk and not
-a painter. Little does he know that I spend at least two hours a day on
-my painting."
-
-"But Master, he says he never sees you there, so how do you explain
-these two hours a day?"
-
-"Excellency, the figure of Judas must be of incomparable evil. Every day
-I search for this face in the criminal quarter, and every day I fail to
-find the evil that I am looking for. If I cannot find this man, however,
-I can use the head of the prior--it would do admirably, but I have
-hesitated for fear of hurting his feelings."
-
-Ludovico slapped his knees and roared with laughter. There were no more
-complaints.
-
-Finally, in 1498, the scaffolding was removed from the painting and
-Leonardo's masterpiece was revealed. The twelve apostles grouped at the
-table are shown each responding in his own way to the words of Christ,
-"One of you shall betray me." Again hundreds flocked to see this latest
-marvel of Leonardo's. Its striking influence was felt by generations of
-painters. Even now, more than four hundred and fifty years later, the
-world still comes to stand before the genius of Leonardo da Vinci in the
-refectory of Santa Maria delle Grazie.
-
-
-The clouds of war were gathering again over Italy. In April of 1498,
-Charles VIII of France died and his successor was Louis of Orleans, who
-became Louis XII. The new King of France laid claim to the Dukedom of
-Milan, and Ludovico again tried to form an alliance against him. But the
-years of juggling enemy against enemy and friend against friend were now
-coming to an end. No one trusted Il Moro any more, and suddenly he
-realized that he was to be alone in this new fight. After nearly twenty
-years of power sustained by powerful alliances, Ludovico was forced to
-turn to his own people of Lombardy. Frantically he tried to correct the
-injustices of years. The people had been cruelly taxed to support the
-extravagances of the Sforza court, and, in addition, they had been badly
-treated by petty government officials. Ludovico now sought to repay the
-past miseries of his people and to rally them to his support. In such a
-spirit he remembered his court painter, Leonardo da Vinci, and gave him
-a vineyard and considerable piece of land not far from the Porta
-Vercellina.
-
-Now, for the first time in his life, Leonardo knew financial security.
-With the income from the vineyard, and in the peace of his estate, he
-was left free to follow his own researches. He took no notice that his
-"peace" was surrounded by the threat of war. Indeed, he remained aloof
-from politics and court intrigues as much as was possible for a man
-living in the midst of such chaotic times.
-
-Leonardo now had the opportunity to follow up an early interest--the
-study of plants. He made many beautiful drawings; no plant was too small
-to catch his eye. His notes on botany began to grow. With his genius for
-observation and analysis of nature, Leonardo made some extraordinary
-discoveries of botanical laws entirely unknown before his time. He wrote
-of the phenomenon of _heliotropism_, or the movement of plants toward or
-away from the sunlight. In addition, he described the phenomenon known
-as _geotropism_, or the growth of plants according to gravitational law,
-as for example, roots growing downward and shoots growing upward. He
-also defined the laws of phyllotaxis, which describe the system or order
-of leaf arrangement on a plant's stem. That is, leaves are arranged
-spirally around a stem so that the third leaf above grows out over the
-third leaf below on one type of plant; or, on another type, the two
-third leaves are over the two third leaves below. The same natural laws
-apply to the branches of plants as well; they occur so that every leaf
-and branch can receive sufficient air and light. Amazingly enough, these
-laws, which Leonardo described so completely, were not rediscovered
-until almost two centuries later!
-
-Leonardo went even further in his botanical studies. He experimented
-with gourds, planting them in various aqueous solutions; this
-anticipated modern methods of growing plants in chemicals. He also
-tested the actions of arsenic and mercury poisons in plants. He
-reproduced the shape and form of leaves by pressing them on paper coated
-with lampblack, a method that was not used again until the nineteenth
-century. Carefully noted, too, in his writings was the rising of sap
-from the roots to the branches by capillary action; this, too, was not
-rediscovered until much later--in the eighteenth century. Leonardo also
-extracted oils and essences from flowers and studied the influences of
-altitude on the development of vegetation. Indeed Leonardo's very
-approaches to a systematic classification of plants were the forerunners
-of modern methods of classifying.
-
-In the seclusion of his own home, as he continued his studies of
-geometry with Pacioli, Leonardo again turned to his observations of the
-heavens. On the roof of his house he had set up a small observatory for
-watching the sky at night. Often he looked at the stars through a
-pinhole in a sheet of paper. Leonardo did this to stop the "twinkling"
-of the stars which he recognized as an optical illusion. Moreover, by
-looking at the stars in this manner, he noticed that some were larger
-than others, and imagined to himself how our own earth might look from
-them. Would we not be but another "star" in a vast collection of stars?
-And if that were true--how could the earth be the center of the
-universe? By the same imaginary reasoning, he speculated on how we must
-look to someone on the moon. Realizing that the moonlight on earth
-faintly illuminates the dark side of the earth, he reasoned that then
-there must be an "earthlight" doing the same on the moon. Thus he was
-the first to explain the dim reflected light on the dark side of the
-moon. Moreover, Leonardo is known to have looked at the moon through a
-convex lens, and perhaps even a form of telescope. Indeed, he had built
-telescopic-type tubes with lenses in them and had written directions for
-their use. It seems certain that at about this time Leonardo became
-convinced of the heliocentric theory, the theory that states the sun is
-the center of our universe. On a sheet of mathematical notes Leonardo
-wrote in large letters, "the sun does not move."
-
-During this time he continued to seek out books on astronomy. Leonardo
-was familiar with Aristotle's _Meteorology_, Archimedes' _On the Center
-of Gravity_, and with _Problems in Aristotle's Books of the Sky and the
-World_, a work by Albert of Saxony. This last book Leonardo had to read
-with the help of a Latin dictionary, because his Latin was not good. He
-had already read Plutarch, who had defined the moon as a solid. Plutarch
-had written further that the "spots" on the moon were the result of
-shadows cast by irregularities on its surface. This theory, that was
-apparently abandoned during the Middle Ages, supported the conclusions
-that Leonardo had reached by his own observations. But he still
-struggled against a mistaken idea of his own. For a long while he
-maintained that there were seas and waters upon the moon which accounted
-for the sunlight being reflected so brilliantly.
-
-Meanwhile, in July of 1499, the French army had reached Lombardy.
-Ludovico was now in a state of desperation. He tried to appeal to the
-people of Milan, explaining that their heavy taxes had been due to the
-constant threats from abroad. But, however hard he tried to arouse their
-sense of loyalty to him, the public of Milan turned a deaf ear. They had
-not forgotten how Ludovico had allied himself with Charles VIII--a
-foreign king! Ludovico now had to put his trust in his army commander,
-Galeazzo da Sanseverino, despite warnings that this was a man of
-doubtful loyalty. Moreover, to make matters worse, Louis XII had
-succeeded in forming an alliance against Ludovico; and, among his allies
-was a powerful cardinal, son of Pope Alexander VI--the notorious Cesare
-Borgia.
-
-From a note on a page of designs for supplying and heating a bath we
-know that Leonardo continued his quiet life, only vaguely disturbed by
-the political upheaval taking place around him. His note reads, "On the
-first day of August 1499 I wrote here of movement and weight." He had
-made many experiments and calculations concerning the movement and
-weight of objects. He had drawn, for example, the flight of an arrow to
-describe motion through air and although he wrote no specific formula,
-he marked the three stages of its trajectory--the initial push, the
-slowing and the steeper downward path as the arrow's momentum was
-overcome by the resistance of the air. He also defined the law of
-movement on an inclined plane and he arrived at the root principle of
-Newton's law of gravitation when he wrote, "every weight tends to fall
-toward the center by the shortest way."
-
-A diagram of this period is probably the first scientific graph.
-Leonardo had experimented with two balls dropped from a height. First he
-dropped them together and then one after the other. In attempting to
-solve the mathematical problems presented by these falling bodies he
-drew a graph of vertical and horizontal lines. The times it took for the
-balls to fall were marked on the horizontal lines and the distances on
-the vertical lines--thus, he could trace their relationship.
-
-But this peaceful time of productive work was running out for Leonardo.
-Ludovico's commander, Galeazzo, had yielded the fortress of Alessandria
-to the French at the first battle. Ludovico himself had sent his sons
-and his treasure to his brother, Cardinal Ascanio, in Germany. When he
-saw that his cause was lost, he turned the Sforza castle over to
-Bernardino da Corte, a trusted commander, making certain that it was
-fully supplied with arms and food. Then in sorrow, Ludovico Sforza, Duke
-of Milan, left his city for the last time as ruler of Lombardy. The
-gates of Milan were opened to the French in October of 1499, and
-Bernardino da Corte surrendered the Sforza castle.
-
-French soldiers now occupied Milan as conquerors and the people of the
-city were in a state of confusion. Those who could made their peace with
-the French; but others, who had been supporters of Ludovico, fled to
-avoid arrest. Leonardo, who would be suspect to the French, packed up
-his few possessions--although he did manage to retain his estate--and
-left, together with Pacioli and an apprentice, for Mantua.
-
- [Illustration: _Leonardo had to flee Milan._]
-
-
-
-
- 9
- _Cesare Borgia_
-
-
-Leonardo, Pacioli, and Salai, the apprentice, arrived in Mantua in
-February of the year 1500. They were given refuge in the castle of
-Isabella d'Este, who was the sister of Beatrice, and the wife of
-Francesco Gonzaga, governor of Mantua. Isabella was one of the eminent
-women of her time and attracted to her court the intellectual life of
-Italy. In Leonardo she recognized the man of genius; indeed, she treated
-him as an equal, putting her castle at his disposal. She persuaded him
-to paint her portrait and Leonardo commenced a preparatory drawing.
-
-In the evenings at the castle there were discussions and music and here
-Leonardo again met his pupil and companion on the trip from Florence so
-many years ago--Atalante Migliorotti who had left Milan in 1490 to
-assume the post of court musician to Isabella.
-
-Although Leonardo had found a haven of peace in the political storm that
-raged about the city state of Mantua, he and Pacioli took to the road
-again for reasons unknown. Isabella d'Este, who still wanted Leonardo at
-her court, sent many a letter and messenger in the following years to
-bring Leonardo back--first to finish the portrait and then, when that
-failed, to sell to her any picture that Leonardo wished to send.
-Strangely enough, however, Leonardo seems to have turned his back upon
-the one sympathetic person he had met in a world of indifference.
-
-
-The first, warm breezes of spring were blowing over the lagoons of
-Venice when Leonardo and Pacioli stepped ashore on the Piazzetta, or
-Little Square of San Marco. But the beauty of this jewel-like city
-rising from the sea was momentarily ignored by the two travelers for an
-angry, frightened crowd had gathered about the Doge's palace on the
-Piazzetta.
-
-The people of Venice were fearful because their fleet had just suffered
-a crushing defeat by the Turks. This meant that their power at sea, once
-supreme, was now no more. Year by year, moreover, their possessions in
-the east had been slowly whittled away, and now the city itself was
-threatened by invasion. At this same time, the Venetian ambassador,
-Manenti, hoping to make peace with the Turks, had been rudely rejected
-by them. Panic soon swept the city and rumors of the bloodthirsty
-infidel passed from person to person like the rush of an ugly wind.
-Barricades were put up and windows were barred. In this charged
-atmosphere, Leonardo and Pacioli sought out their lodgings.
-
-Soon after Leonardo's arrival here--either because his reputation had
-preceded him or, more likely, because of Fra Luca Pacioli's
-recommendations--he became directly involved with the defenses of
-Venice. Immediately he was sent on an inspection trip of the city's
-existing defenses, especially those inland from where an invasion would
-probably come. When he had seen them, he recommended a system of
-defenses along the Isonzo river near the present border of Yugoslavia,
-using the river itself to the disadvantage of the enemy. He also made
-suggestions for the improvement of forts, and even drew up plans for a
-completely new type--a circular fort. This consisted of a central,
-circular fort surrounded by two belts of fortresses each separated by a
-moat. In the outside moat were four semicircular outposts. Communication
-was by underground galleries. The total absence of superstructure and
-projecting balconies was a new idea for the times. Another new defense
-idea was to station in the moat itself a low, thick tower almost
-completely submerged, defended by a thin opening near the waterline. It
-was reached from the main fort by an underground passage and the
-gunsmoke was removed by vents. According to Leonardo no enemy could
-conceal himself in any part of the defenses and not be seen from such an
-outpost.
-
-Leonardo's most unusual scheme for defending Venice, however, was his
-idea of approaching an enemy fleet under the water and then putting
-holes in the hulls of their ships. Actually, the idea of diving was not
-a new one. Aristotle had written of diving and diving bells, and
-certainly the stories of pearl fishers in the Orient were well known in
-the Renaissance. But Leonardo designed a diver's suit closely resembling
-those used today. This consisted of a complete suit of leather with
-helmet and eyepieces; it was made airtight by spirals of steel at the
-joints. He then added a bladder for holding air which fastened inside
-the suit at the diver's chest. It is possible that Leonardo also
-invented an air chamber that could be used by the diver while under
-water--but he was very secretive about this invention for fear of how
-men might abuse such a discovery. He wrote, "... and this I do not
-publish or divulge, on account of the evil nature of man, who would
-practice assassinations at the bottom of the seas...."
-
-Leonardo felt the same way about a "submarine" that he presented to the
-Councilors and Tribunal of Venice. This resembled a turtle's shell with
-a raised bump on the center which was the "periscope." When submerged
-the water probably rose to an area just around the "periscope," but,
-again, the information about its air-supply is missing and the only
-reference to it is a reminder to close the "l--." In addition, he
-invented a system of screws mounted in tongs with the borer in the
-middle for putting holes in the bottoms of enemy ships, and at the same
-time he thought of a defense against such an attack by designing the
-defending vessels with double hulls.
-
-Among Leonardo's other maritime devices were designs for boats that
-could dredge canals, harbors, and lagoons. What was the result of all
-these plans? We do not know. Whether any one of them was used against
-the Turks is a mystery.
-
-At any rate, Leonardo and Pacioli left Venice that same spring and
-arrived in Florence in April of 1500. One of the purposes of Leonardo's
-journey was to visit his father who was now living on Via Ghibellina
-with his fourth wife. Leonardo was now forty-eight. Still tall and
-straight with the strength of his youth, his face prematurely aged and
-his hair thinning back from his high forehead, Leonardo was more than
-ever an outstanding looking man. He still scorned fashionable clothes
-and dressed according to his own comfort which made him even more
-noticeable among the crowd. His deep-set eyes with their direct and
-penetrating glance, framed by his full, reddish beard, never missed a
-thing, although he now wore spectacles at his work.
-
-Now that he was back in Florence, Leonardo needed lodgings and a job. He
-had banked his small savings, and he did not want to touch that. His
-father's house with the five children of his present wife plus the sons
-from his previous marriages was too full to accommodate Leonardo.
-Moreover, the relationship between Piero and Leonardo was polite but
-distant, as Piero preferred the children of his later marriages.
-
-Luckily, the place to live and the commission Leonardo needed presented
-themselves at the same time. The Church of the Annunciation of the
-Servite Order of Monks needed an altarpiece, and, as Leonardo's fame was
-great, they offered him and his apprentice quarters in the monastery.
-Here, in the solitude of a monastic cell, Leonardo was able to return to
-his own researches. His long association with Fra Luca Pacioli continued
-as they worked together on Pacioli's edition of Euclid's _Elements_. At
-the same time, with his absorption in geometry, Leonardo commenced his
-studies of the transformation of solids; that is, changing the shape of
-something to another shape without diminishing or increasing its
-substance.
-
-In his preoccupation with geometry, Leonardo had apparently done little
-about the commission which the Servite monks had given him. He finally
-yielded to their complaints, however, and commenced to draw the
-preliminary study for the subject, which was "St. Anne with the Virgin
-and Child." Again his knowledge of geometry is most apparent in the
-finely constructed composition, every gesture of which is as plotted as
-a geometric exercise. In April of 1501, the drawing was finished; it
-caused an immediate sensation throughout Florence. For two days the
-public was allowed to pass in front of it.
-
-But now a change was taking place in Leonardo. He was no longer content
-with simply painting. His highly original researches for pictures had
-slowly grown to the point where the research was more important than
-painting. In a sense the scientist had taken the brush from the artist.
-In two letters from Isabella d'Este's emissary in Florence we learn, "He
-is entirely wrapped up in geometry and has no patience for painting."
-This excerpt from a letter dated April 8, 1501, was followed six days
-later by another which said in part, "In brief, his mathematical
-experiments have made painting so distasteful to him that he cannot even
-bear to take up a brush."
-
-
-A few months after the completion of the St. Anne drawing, Leonardo
-received a letter signed by Cesare Borgia, Duke of Valentinois. Leonardo
-frowned and thought back to his last days in Milan. When King Louis XII
-of France had entered the city, he had summoned the painter of the "Last
-Supper" to an audience. The king had been generous in his praise and had
-tried to persuade Leonardo to remain. At that same audience had also
-been Cesare Borgia, an ally of the French. Leonardo remembered the man
-now--the dark hair and eyes, the black, arched eyebrows, and the face
-marked by some old disease. He was a powerful-chested, thin-hipped man
-who had originally been made a cardinal by his father, Pope Alexander
-VI. But the attractions of secular power soon persuaded him to abandon
-this title. With the enthusiastic help of his father, Borgia had fought,
-murdered, and deceived his way to a formidable position of authority in
-these last years. Leonardo, in the seclusion of the monastery, had
-lately heard that Borgia's army had even been at the gates of Florence.
-
-The letter addressed to Leonardo was an offer to assume the post of
-Architect and Military Engineer to His Excellency, Cesare Borgia. He
-thought of Ludovico Sforza--defeated and captured at the battle of
-Novara just a year ago as he attempted to regain his dukedom. Now the
-duke was a prisoner at Loches in Touraine; Leonardo had written of him,
-"The duke lost his State, his personal possessions and his liberty, and
-none of his enterprises have been completed." And Leonardo also thought
-of his equestrian monument still standing in the castle being used for
-target practice by the French archers. Like the duke, nothing of his own
-had been completed either. Perhaps this Borgia offer was an opportunity.
-Leonardo decided to accept it.
-
-In May of 1502, after having presented himself to Cesare Borgia in Rome,
-Leonardo began his hectic travels through Tuscany and Umbria. He was to
-inspect the fortresses and cities of Cesare's new conquests there, and
-to make whatever recommendations he felt necessary for their
-improvements. Arriving in Piombino, he at once set down a project for
-draining the marshes and reclaiming the land. Also, while he was here,
-he spent hours by the sea watching the waves curl in from the Adriatic
-and studying the crash of water over the beaches. Moving on to Arrezzo,
-he drew up the first in a series of remarkable maps for the army of
-Vitellozzo which, with the backing of Cesare Borgia, was marching
-against Florence. These maps are bird's-eye views of Tuscany and Umbria,
-and somewhat resemble modern aerial photographs. Drawn from Leonardo's
-own observations, the green mountains stand, according to their height,
-in relief, with the roads winding over them and down through the
-valleys. The streams and their tributaries are in blue and even the
-villages and cities are drawn with great exactitude. Indeed Leonardo had
-learned his lessons from old Toscanelli well, and he was one of the
-first to bring the art of cartography to such perfection.
-
-In July and August Leonardo was in Urbino and Pesaro, and by the 8th of
-August he had reached Rimini. Here he strengthened the fortifications
-and then rode quickly on to Cesena. Between Cesena, capital of the
-Romagna, and Porto Cesanatico, he spent from the middle of August to
-September planning a canal between the two, redesigning government
-buildings, and drawing up a new quarter to be built for the city of
-Cesena. At this time he constructed an instrument for telling him the
-speed of water currents in a stream. It told him whether the flow was
-swifter at the surface or at the bottom or on one side or the other of
-the stream's bed.
-
-In the meantime, Florence, alarmed at the growing power of Cesare
-Borgia, appealed to Charles d'Amboise, Regent of Milan for France, to
-come to her aid. Charles responded in the absence of the French King and
-helped to protect Florence. The enemies of Cesare took advantage of this
-to form an alliance, and soon Cesare was being forced back from his
-newly won possessions. Cesare himself then hastened to Milan, and there
-he suddenly came face to face again with Louis, the King of France, who
-was on his way to Naples. Borgia, who could exert great charm and
-influence when he wished, persuaded the king that, all rumors to the
-contrary, he, Cesare, was fighting the enemies of France. Again he won
-over the French, which greatly strengthened his position. Then, from
-Pavia, he issued a decree placing every facility possible at Leonardo's
-disposal. In addition, he instructed all officials to help Leonardo in
-every matter, referring to him as "our highly esteemed court architect."
-
-While Leonardo was in Porto Cesanatico, a delegation from Bayzid II,
-Sultan of Turkey, paid a visit to Cesare Borgia. Among other things the
-delegation was looking for an engineer to build a bridge between
-Constantinople and Pera to replace a temporary wooden structure.
-Leonardo designed for them a single-arched bridge with double ramps at
-either end (looking very much like a present-day "thruway" entrance). He
-provided that it should be approximately twelve hundred feet long,
-eighty feet wide, and one hundred and forty feet above the water.
-
- [Illustration: _Da Vinci's proposed bridge from Constantinople
- (Istanbul) to Pera. Looking very much like a modern "thruway"
- entrance, it was to have double ramps on both sides._]
-
-In his travels through the countryside, Leonardo could not help but
-notice how primitive the mills were. Feeling how strongly the wind blew
-in from the sea, he designed a windmill with a roof that turned with the
-sails. For the mechanism inside he devised a band brake--a semicircle of
-wood into which the large cogwheel of the mill was forced. This mill
-resembles the "Dutch" mills of the Netherlands and was among the first
-of its type to be brought into existence.
-
-In the fall Leonardo was at Imola. There he created another of his
-beautifully rendered maps. He drew this with the help of a magnetic
-compass of his own invention. It consisted of a board with an arc on it
-and a compass needle, and was probably the first magnetic needle on a
-horizontal axis. This time the map was of the city itself, the walls,
-the castle and the principal buildings all touched with color and the
-river winding through the fields. Drawn in the shape of a circle, it
-resembles a view through a telescope from directly above. In Imola, too,
-he met Niccol Machiavelli, the famous historian and political
-scientist, who was an emissary from the Signoria, the Council which now
-governed Florence. These two men became friends and, later,
-collaborators in Leonardo's scheme to make the Arno river navigable to
-the sea.
-
-At this time Cesare Borgia, having achieved great success in his
-military campaigns and confident of his conquests, decided to return to
-Rome. With the disbanding of Borgia's headquarters at Imola, Leonardo's
-duties were finished. Together with his new friend Niccol Machiavelli
-and two other Florentines, he left Imola and the service of Cesare
-Borgia to return to Florence.
-
-In January of 1503, a mathematician named Giovanni Battista Danti
-attempted a flight in a machine that he had designed. This flight was
-part of the entertainment at a wedding reception in Perugia. Danti
-climbed into his apparatus on top of the tower of St. Mary of the
-Virgin. It was pushed off into the air, hovered a few seconds, then
-began slowly drifting toward the ground. But suddenly, one of its wings
-hit a building projection and it crashed. Danti was carried away with a
-broken leg.
-
-The news of the event traveled quickly to Florence.
-
-When Leonardo heard about it, he eagerly questioned all those who had
-either seen it or had heard it described first hand. Danti's attempted
-flight excited Leonardo for now he realized that he was no longer alone
-in his search. With a sense of urgency he returned to the problems of
-flying. He felt now that the solution to flight might be in the swift
-gusts of air through the ravines and the spread wings of the eagle
-drifting high in the sky.
-
-
-
-
- 10
- _Shattered Hopes_
-
-
-Before Leonardo could return to the problem of flight, however, he was
-again faced with the necessity of supporting himself and his growing
-household. The small fees he received for taking on apprentices hardly
-covered the cost of housing and feeding them. Moreover, the equipment he
-had to buy for his scientific researches added further to his strained
-budget. So, when a servant from Francesco del Giocondo, a rich
-Florentine merchant, presented himself at the gate with the request that
-Leonardo accept a commission to paint Francesco's wife, Leonardo was
-only too glad to accept. The name of Francesco's wife was Madonna Lisa,
-or Mona Lisa for short. Leonardo painted her portrait on and off for the
-next three years. Thus, what started as a minor commission ended as the
-one painting--in addition to the "Last Supper"--that most people today
-associate with the name of Leonardo da Vinci.
-
-Having secured this work, Leonardo turned back to his studies of birds
-in flight and the nature of air. The soaring wings of eagles and hawks
-and the way they rode the currents with hardly a dip of their spread
-wings guided Leonardo's thinking from pure mechanics to machines that
-act more on the principle of the glider. He proposed to write a treatise
-on the nature of birds' flight, and, with his usual thoroughness, he
-began to weigh, dissect, and reconstruct various types of birds and
-their wing structure. He realized that one of the main difficulties of
-gliding was maintaining balance, or, more accurately, maintaining the
-center of gravity. From previous observations Leonardo had noted that
-man is capable of making the same motions that a bird does. He had also
-measured the strength of a man's legs and had calculated that man has
-twice the power in his leg muscles that he needs for standing.
-Consequently he began to redesign his machine making use of man's arms
-and legs to operate or "flap" the wings instead of standing him on a
-platform.
-
-The first of Leonardo's new designs was a sort of harness apparatus
-strapped across the shoulders of the flyer who was supposed to be able
-to keep himself balanced by moving the lower part of his body. He could
-manipulate the flight by handles that were connected to the flexible,
-outer parts of the wings. These wings were designed from the webbed
-wings of the bat. Surprisingly enough, this device closely resembled the
-experimental gliders used by Otto Lilienthal almost four centuries later
-in Germany.
-
-Leonardo was now approaching other solutions to pure flight when further
-hostilities interrupted his work. Florence and Pisa were in bitter
-rivalry, and their struggle had assumed the proportions of a major war.
-The Florentine army was now practically at the gates of Pisa. Niccol
-Machiavelli urged the Signoria to enlist the help of Leonardo da Vinci,
-who might be able to think of an immediate plan for destroying Pisa and
-her army. Never one to think in terms of an immediate battle or a
-temporary success, Leonardo put forth a daring and sweeping plan that
-would forever reduce the power of Pisa. The plan was as simple as it was
-monumental--divert the Arno river from its course into two canals that
-would empty into the sea at Leghorn south of Pisa. In this way, Pisa
-would lose her water supply and her opening to the sea.
-
-The plan met with immediate approval and by the end of July 1503,
-Leonardo was sent out to survey the entire course of the river. He was
-accompanied by Giovanni "the Piper," a man who was frequently employed
-on minor engineering projects and who was the official player of the
-pipes to the city of Florence. Giovanni was also the father of Benvenuto
-Cellini, who became the most famous goldsmith of the Renaissance. As
-they made their way to Pisa, Leonardo made some more of his
-extraordinary maps of the area, paying particular attention to the
-course of the Arno and its tributaries. These maps later inspired him to
-plan a whole series showing the main watersheds of Italy.
-
-When he rode into the Florentine camp drawn up before Pisa, Leonardo
-designed from his observations and maps, a dam on the Arno to regulate
-the course of the river. This bird's-eye view map is a marvel of
-exactness. It shows the flow of the river hitting the dam with its
-swirling backwash and overflow. Leonardo's knowledge of the movement of
-water was so great and his craftsmanship in drawing so fine that the
-water in this map seems to flow before one's eyes. One of the main
-problems in regulating the Arno was its tendency to continually be
-shifting its bed by the deposits of new sediment, and Leonardo realized
-it would be a long time before this project could be completed.
-
-When he returned to Florence he presented to the Signoria, as part of
-his survey, various machines to hasten the excavation of the Arno. He
-had designed a crane that would assist in the digging out of two
-different levels at the same time. He also submitted the results of his
-calculations on the saving of muscular energy by the use of such
-machines. In addition, Leonardo proposed to use the water in the canals
-for irrigation purposes and had even calculated what the volume and
-velocity of a jet of water would be if projected from an opening in the
-bottom of the canal wall into an irrigation ditch. As if this were not
-enough, he had invented a practical method of piling as a foundation for
-the lock-basins to protect them against the dangers of erosion.
-
-A separate map of this period on the flow of rivers in general was
-intended to relate to his treatise on the nature of water. In this
-treatise is the first outline of the fundamental principles of
-hydrodynamics, as for example:
-
-The velocity of a current increases with the slope and decreases with
-the winding of the riverbed.
-
-The volume of a river is in proportion to the width of its bed, the
-slope and the depth of the water being equal.
-
-The slope and width being equal, the speed of the current is greatest in
-the deepest part of the river.
-
-The excavation force increases at the narrowest section of the river.
-
-
-Because of the grumbling of the military commanders at what they
-considered a waste of time, Machiavelli had to intervene with the
-Signoria before Leonardo was sent out again with documents of authority
-to continue with his plans. He spent well into the fall surveying the
-Arno and in October he was back in Florence.
-
-Meanwhile the fighting between Pisa and Florence had been lessened by
-two political changes. In August Pope Alexander VI had died and his son
-Cesare Borgia became seriously ill. The Republic of Florence was now
-free of its most dangerous enemies--the Borgias. The city relaxed in its
-new security and the hostilities between Florence and Pisa died down to
-an uneasy armed watch.
-
-Leonardo quickly took advantage of the situation to present an early
-dream of his to the Signoria. He again put forth his idea of a
-commercial canal to the sea and made mention of the great advantages
-there would be for all the mills, lumber yards, forges and other
-commercial interests in utilizing the water power that would be
-available from his project. Piero Soderini, the governor of the
-city-state of Florence, was impressed and thought of the glory it would
-bring to Florence and himself. He told Leonardo he would present it to
-the Signoria.
-
-Leonardo now plunged into a winter of great activity. Forced to draw
-from his savings, he had rejoined the guild of painters in October of
-1503, and then applied for the commission of painting the murals in the
-council chamber of the Palace of the Signoria. It had been planned to
-decorate this great hall with scenes commemorating famous Florentine
-victories, and Leonardo chose the battle of Anghiari where the soldiers
-of Florence defeated the Milanese in 1440. In addition to working on the
-"Mona Lisa" and continuing with the canal project--for which he was now
-designing great suction pumps to lift rivers from one level to
-another--he turned again to astronomy and geology.
-
-Leonardo, while investigating the course of the upper Arno, had come
-across much evidence that the land there had at one time been completely
-under water. Various types of ancient ocean life and vegetation lay
-scattered in layers along the ridges of the mountains, and these
-Leonardo collected and brought back to his studio. He wrote, "above the
-plains of Italy where now birds fly in flocks, fishes were wont to
-wander in large shoals." He reread Ptolemy, the ancient Greek geographer
-Strabo, and even Sir John Mandeville, an English author of travel books,
-in his quest for knowledge of distant places. He talked to travelers,
-sailors, and wrote to friends to send him information about the
-countries they had seen or lived in. Strabo, in particular, had set
-forth the doctrine that the earth's transformation had taken place by
-the forces of volcanoes and water, but the wisdom of these early men had
-been obscured by the closed minds of the Middle Ages.
-
-Even in his own time of reawakening knowledge--the Renaissance--Leonardo
-had to contend with the combined superstition of the Church and the
-ignorance of misguided scholars. For example, the Church believed in the
-great flood, as described in the Bible, and the scholars claimed that if
-what Leonardo said were true--that the earth was the result of an
-evolutionary process--there would have been written records. To this
-latter Leonardo responded, "... sufficient for us is the testimony of
-things produced in the salt waters and now found again in the high
-mountains far from the seas." But Leonardo's conception of the evolution
-of the earth was mistaken in one respect. He regarded the earth as
-organic--living--and the flow of water he believed to be like the flow
-of blood in man. Indeed, according to Leonardo, all living creatures
-were reflections of a living, breathing earth. It was only when he again
-turned his eyes inquiringly toward the moon and the laws of the universe
-that he began to realize his error.
-
-It had been the idea that the earth was the center of the universe which
-supported Leonardo's theory of an organic earth. Yet after years of
-observation and study he abandoned this theory and, with the eye of a
-man centuries ahead of his time, he wrote in his notes, "The moon has
-every month a winter and a summer. And it has greater colds and greater
-heats and its equinoxes are colder than ours." He went further and
-identified the elements existing on the moon such as "water, air, and
-fire," and described them and their functions as being like those on our
-own earth. In so doing he recognized the existence of the moon as a
-solid in space, reflecting the light of the sun--one of many "stars" in
-a universe. With his acceptance of this concept he realized that the
-earth could not be organic.
-
-
-In May of 1504, the Signoria complained to Leonardo that there had been
-no progress on the proposed paintings for their council chamber, even
-though he had already been partially paid for them. Accordingly, he was
-forced to sign a document that he must be finished by February of next
-year or refund all monies paid him. As was his custom he had made many
-preliminary drawings. Although he was well acquainted with horses he had
-again researched their anatomy and actions. Pages of rearing, frightened
-horses and men in combat covered his studio tables. On one of these
-pages there are sketches of the heads of a lion, some horses and a
-man--all with fierce expressions on their faces. Here Leonardo hinted at
-the comparative anatomy of expression in man and animal that Darwin was
-to write about almost four hundred years later.
-
-But the paintings could wait, for now the Arno River was in spring
-flood. The time had arrived to make the first attempts at diverting the
-river into its new course. Leonardo was again in the field supervising
-the work. There had been much opposition to Leonardo's canal from both
-the army captains and the Signoria. It was called a whim and a crazy
-idea, but Piero Soderini and Niccol Machiavelli were stubborn in their
-defense of Leonardo's plan and they overcame all opposition to it. And
-indeed, the raising of the sluice gates was successful and the Arno
-actually flowed into its new bed. The tensions in the camp and in the
-Council of Florence were eased. The only sad person was Leonardo, for he
-had just learned of the death of his father.
-
-Leonardo felt the loss deeply. Outwardly, however, he only acknowledged
-the death of his father at a distance. Not only had Leonardo and his
-father drifted apart over the years, Piero left nothing to Leonardo in
-his will. His father's other children quarreled among themselves over
-what money he did leave. Leonardo's one friend in the family was Uncle
-Francesco, who was still living in Vinci. When he heard of his brother's
-will, Francesco made out a will of his own and left everything to the
-nephew he loved--Leonardo.
-
-After having successfully diverted the Arno river, it was now necessary
-for Leonardo to return to the painting commissioned by the Signoria for
-its council chamber. But recently, Leonardo had suffered a rebuff in
-this work. Originally he had been given the whole room to do but now the
-opposite wall had been assigned to another man--Michelangelo Buonarroti.
-Leonardo had first met the young Michelangelo when he helped to judge
-the best location for Michelangelo's monumental statue of David. The two
-men were opposites in every way. Leonardo, fifty-two years old,
-carefully dressed, cool and detached, was a man whose every action was
-the result of a thoughtful and analytical mind. Michelangelo, twenty-six
-years old, his clothes rumpled and covered with marble dust, was
-passionate and moody--an impulsive youth totally dedicated to art. They
-did not like each other, and now Leonardo was forced into a rivalry for
-which he had no heart.
-
-The duel between these two giants of art aroused the whole of Florence
-and there was a constant stream of people watching them at work.
-Michelangelo was given a studio in the hospital of Sant' Onofrio and
-Leonardo was working in the Papal Chamber in Santa Maria Novella. Among
-the many people who came to watch Leonardo was a young man of nineteen.
-He was already a pupil of Perugino and the experience of meeting and
-learning from Leonardo was to influence him the rest of his life. His
-name was Raffaello Sanzio--one of the great Renaissance painters of
-Italy and known to us by the name of Raphael.
-
-While Leonardo worked at Santa Maria Novella he had the opportunity of
-continuing his studies in anatomy. Dissections at that time were
-novelties and when one was performed the doors were thrown open to the
-public. Leonardo must have attended the public dissections at the Church
-of Santa Croce. Now at Santa Maria Novella there was a hospital, and
-here Leonardo was able to continue his own dissections without
-interruption. In a cool room below the hospital where bodies were kept
-Leonardo worked late into the night. By the flickering lights of candles
-and in the silence of the world about him he studied, drew, and wrote in
-his notes of the wonders of the human body.
-
- [Illustration: _In a cool room below the hospital, Leonardo worked
- late into the night._]
-
-He performed autopsies on people who had died natural deaths--a special
-permission granted to him by the monks of the church, and among these
-autopsies are the first written reports of some of the diseases that are
-the causes of death. Arteriosclerosis, or stony growths in the blood
-vessels, and pulmonary tuberculosis, a nut-like growth in the lung, are
-among the discoveries Leonardo made in his lonely searches, although he
-did not use these medical names for them.
-
-Above all Leonardo was attracted to the function of the muscles,
-especially those in the arms and legs. So faithfully, in fact, did he
-record the origin and insertion of all the various muscles that these
-drawings can be used as anatomical models today. Moreover, he believed
-that a good drawing was worth pages of words describing human anatomy.
-The muscles were rendered as cords so as to better understand their
-function. He described this function as one of pulling instead of
-pushing and he noted that for every muscle there is an opposing muscle.
-When one contracts the other expands. For example, when you tighten the
-biceps in your arm you can feel the looseness of the triceps, the muscle
-on the opposite side.
-
-
-As the end of the summer of 1504 approached, Leonardo's dream of the
-canal from Florence to the sea was destroyed. The summer had been hot
-and without rain. The water in the canal dried up and the Arno river
-returned to its original course. All the old arguments against the plan
-were revived. The Florentine army captains rebelled against the job of
-defending a useless project. Again Soderini and Machiavelli intervened.
-After heated debates in the Council of Eighty, which had been called
-into special session, Machiavelli himself was sent out to oversee the
-work. It was brought almost to completion when in late October disaster
-struck. The rains that had failed to come in summer fell from the
-heavens in great cloudbursts. Storm after storm swept the valleys. The
-workmen left and the soldiers were recalled. The Pisan army rushed in to
-fill up the diggings and one final storm washed away the dream to
-nothing but eroded mounds of dirt.
-
-Leonardo buried his disappointment in other work. When the drawing for
-the Battle of Anghiari was ready for transfer to the wall of the council
-chamber, he had a special scaffolding made of his own invention which
-worked on the principle of a pair of scissors standing on end, with a
-long platform on top. As the legs were spread the scaffolding was
-lowered and when they were pinched together it was raised. The wall had
-been prepared with a special mixture which he hoped would bring out the
-brilliance of his tempera colors. With several assistants who had been
-assigned to him by the Signoria the violence of the Battle of Anghiari
-was transferred to the wall and the actual painting was begun.
-
-During the winter months Leonardo would relax from his work on the huge
-painting and his dissections to roam the country around Florence. He
-visited the slaughterhouses where the animals were killed and prepared
-for market. Here he was able to examine the hearts of animals just
-slaughtered and to note that the heart retained its action until the
-body was almost cold. He made a glass model of the aorta (the main
-artery leading from the heart) of an ox with which he could experiment
-on the flow of the blood. He intended to add to it a glass tube for one
-of the semilunar valves of the heart. He also experimented with a frog,
-dissecting its brain, heart, and entrails and noted that it ceased to
-twitch only when the spinal cord was severed. In his notes, he wrote,
-"The frog instantly dies when the spinal cord is pierced; and previous
-to this it lived without head, without heart or any bowels or intestines
-or skin; and here therefore it would seem lies the foundation of
-movement and life." He was of course searching for the reasons that
-muscles moved and from where the impulses originated.
-
-One of Leonardo's favorite places to visit was Fiesole where his uncle
-Allessandro Amadori lived. Uncle Allessandro was the brother of
-Leonardo's first stepmother and, since he had loved her so much, he
-likewise felt an affection for Allessandro. At Fiesole, which rises over
-Florence in a steep ascent, Leonardo could watch the birds circling in
-the air below him.
-
-On these lofty heights, he would unfold his drawings of flying machines.
-Leonardo had progressed now to a point where an actual flight was all
-that was left. He had designed a sort of flying boat--a shell with wings
-that moved up and down and he had introduced a tail like that of a bird.
-He had noted that the tail of a bird acts as a rudder, a stabilizer and
-a brake when landing.
-
-But Leonardo's most recent design was one that was called an
-_ornithopter_. It consisted of a wooden frame, two huge wings like a
-bat's, a series of ropes and pulleys and a windlass, all planned with
-the lightest of materials. The flyer, lying prone in the frame, his feet
-in leather stirrups connected to the wings by pulleys, would move his
-feet up and down to flap the wings while, at the same time, he operated
-the windlass with his arms in order to guide the machine. Soon he hoped
-to build this machine and try it out.
-
-Meanwhile, Leonardo returned to his painting in the council chamber with
-impatience, for spring was approaching and the time to finally realize
-his dream of flying would be at hand. Aside from an assistant who had
-tested the pedals and windlass, no one knew of his plan to actually put
-his machine in the air.
-
- [Illustration: _The_ ornithopter, _one of Leonardo's designs for a
- "flying machine." By pumping his feet in the stirrups, the flyer
- could flap the device's wings._]
-
-Weeks passed and the painting was almost finished. The huge wall was
-covered with plunging horses and embattled soldiers. The colors were
-brilliant on the special mixture he had prepared for the wall--but they
-were not drying as they should have. Something was wrong. To speed the
-drying process, Leonardo had a special fire built in the room that
-directed the heat onto the painting. Spectators were allowed to watch as
-the waves of hot air rose against the wall. Then--disaster began slowly
-with a small trickle of paint from the top! Before anybody could put out
-the fire, the great figures and horses slowly melted down the wall in
-shiny, sticky streaks of color. Leonardo fled the room in an agony of
-shame.
-
-With his own friends discouraged, the Signoria hostile, and the friends
-of Michelangelo triumphant, Leonardo went back to Fiesole. He went back
-with his secret dream of flight. The world would soon forget the Battle
-of Anghiari--but the conquest of the air, if he could achieve it, would
-live forever.
-
-In the spring of 1506, from the slopes of Monte Cecero near Fiesole,
-legend tells us that a great bird sailed into the air and disappeared.
-No one knows whether Leonardo actually flew his machine or not but
-Girolamo Cardano, the son of a friend of Leonardo, wrote, long after
-Leonardo had died, "Leonardo da Vinci also attempted to fly, but he
-failed. He was a fine painter." Another dream had been shattered.
-
-
-
-
- 11
- _The Return to Milan_
-
-
-Leonardo felt his fifty-four years that spring day in 1506. The
-bitterness of his failures and the frustration of his dreams added
-considerably to the weight of his years. All morning he had wasted in
-argument with Soderini and the Signoria. If it had not been for the
-letter from Charles d'Amboise, Viceroy of the King of France for Milan,
-he would have felt like a beggar. Charles d'Amboise had been appointed
-military governor of Milan by Louis XII ever since the French had
-conquered that city and captured Duke Ludovico Sforza. But the authority
-of the letter had finally won a grudging consent from Soderini. Leonardo
-looked about him to see if he had forgotten anything and slowly climbed
-onto his horse. He nodded to Salai, his apprentice, looked back to see
-if his servant had the pack-horses ready, and started down the street
-leading the small procession. He was going back to Milan.
-
-Leonardo took out the letter and reread it. The words were respectful
-and admiring--and in French. They requested the presence of "Matre
-Leonard de Vinci" at the court of Charles d'Amboise, for purposes of
-painting and other "diverse projects" for the King of France. The letter
-restored a measure of confidence to Leonardo's self-respect. Before
-Leonardo left, Soderini had made him sign a letter in which Leonardo
-promised to return to Florence within three months and to leave a
-deposit of one hundred and fifty florins which would be held against his
-return. It was signed, notarized and dated May 30, 1506. Nevertheless,
-Leonardo had decided to accept the French envoy's offer; moreover, he
-looked forward to the prospect of returning to his vineyard at Porta
-Vercellina and the understanding of a sympathetic patron.
-
-Indeed, Charles d'Amboise turned out to be more than sympathetic. He
-recognized Leonardo as a great artist; but even more, he was one of the
-few patrons who could appreciate the magnitude of Leonardo's scientific
-and mechanical genius. In the court of Charles, Leonardo once more
-enjoyed a time of peace and an assured income. The French
-Vice-Chancellor of Milan, Geffroy Carles, who was second in command, was
-also a distinguished scholar and a patron of the arts and natural
-sciences. With the admiration and support of these two men and
-especially with the distant backing of King Louis XII of France,
-Leonardo's dismal memories of Florence began to fade.
-
-Leonardo's three months' allotted absence from Florence, however, were
-soon past and a letter arrived from Soderini demanding either Leonardo's
-return or a forfeiture of the one hundred and fifty florins deposit. Now
-a tug-of-war developed between the Viceroy of Milan and the governor of
-Florence over Leonardo. The Signoria reminded Charles that Leonardo had
-his work to complete, while Charles d'Amboise and Geffroy Carles
-demanded an extension of time. One month more was granted. More letters
-were exchanged until the affair became so heated that the King of France
-himself intervened. In January of 1507 the French King informed Soderini
-and the Signoria that Leonardo was "not to move from Milan until our
-arrival." Since Florence at this time was under the protection of the
-French, such final authority silenced the Signoria. Shortly afterwards
-Leonardo discharged his obligation to the Signoria by relinquishing the
-one hundred and fifty florins, and he at last became free from the
-demands of his native city.
-
-On May 24, 1507 King Louis XII re-entered Milan with all the splendor
-and color that France and the Dukedom of Milan could confer upon their
-ruler. Knights in armor and the ladies of the courts followed the king
-who rode in flowing white and gold under a canopy of blue decorated with
-the lilies of France.
-
-With such pomp and display in Milan, Leonardo was soon back at his old
-occupation of designing pageants and tournaments. While some of the
-people from the days of the Sforzas returned, not many remembered Duke
-Ludovico, who was slowly dying in a French dungeon. Among the people
-that Leonardo now met, there appeared Francesco de' Melzi, a noble from
-an old Milanese family, who entered Leonardo's life at this time as a
-pupil. Soon the young man became like a son to Leonardo. Of handsome
-appearance, he had the sensitivity to appreciate the essential
-loneliness of Leonardo and so, almost without realizing it, he filled a
-gap in Leonardo's life that was to last until the end of his days.
-
-Yet, as Franceso de' Melzi opened one door of Leonardo's life another
-door closed. He received word that his beloved uncle Francesco had died
-at Vinci and that he had become the heir to his uncle's property. No
-sooner had this news been delivered when Leonardo was notified that
-Giuliano, a son of Piero, and now a lawyer in his own right, was
-contesting the will. All the frustrations of his life in Florence now
-rose to an angry pitch and he set out once again for Florence to fight
-for his own rights.
-
-Wisely, Leonardo had armed himself with letters from his new,
-influential patrons and even one from King Louis himself recommending,
-"... we request that you will cause this dispute to be settled in the
-best and briefest delivery of justice...." In August of that same
-year--1507--Charles d'Amboise added his personal letter suggesting that
-the king could not spare Leonardo too long from the court at Milan.
-
-It was with the title of Painter and Engineer to the King of France that
-Leonardo rode back to Florence to await the outcome of the judges in his
-case. He went to stay with a sculptor friend, Giovanni Rustici, a man of
-thirty-five and also an ex-student of Verrochio. They lived in a house
-lent to Rustici by a wealthy scholar and patron named Piero Martelli.
-
-Leonardo soon found that he and Rustici had much in common. Rustici,
-too, collected the odds and ends of his journeys into the country.
-Flying about the house were a tame eagle and a raven, while, at dinner,
-a pet porcupine begged for food. Rustici, however, was a believer in
-alchemy and magic. To practice these arts the young man devoted one room
-to the strange mixtures which bubbled over flames as he attempted to
-change base metals into gold, or to call upon the spirits to predict the
-future.
-
-Leonardo settled into the life of the house very quickly and even helped
-his friend on an important sculpture commission. This was a group
-composition of St. John between the Pharisee and the Levite for over the
-doors of the baptistry. He also started to gather together his scattered
-notes on all the subjects that he had written about, going through them
-making corrections and erasing the repetitions. Possibly Leonardo was
-considering the publication of all his material for he wrote, "Begun at
-Florence in the house of Piero di Braccio Martelli, on the 22nd day of
-March, 1508. This will be a collection without order, made up of many
-sheets which I have copied here, hoping afterwards to arrange them in
-order in their proper places according to the subjects of which they
-treat...." This "collection without order" of almost forty years
-extended into practically all branches of human knowledge, founded on
-years of observation and experiment. Indeed, it was the magnificent
-effort of one extraordinary mind to push back the curtains of ignorance
-in order to let the light of natural truth shine through to mankind.
-
-In addition, Leonardo returned to his studies of anatomy and comparative
-anatomy. For this latter he made many beautiful drawings of the legs of
-animals as compared to those of man. With them, Leonardo tried to
-indicate man's place in the natural order of the world. He pointed out
-that our physical bodies are basically the same as those of animals, and
-that the muscular and organic differences are those of function only.
-For example, bird and man have the same chest muscles, called the
-pectoralis. But the bird, in order to fly, has developed these into
-powerful instruments of motion. Man, on the other hand, has learned to
-stand and move in an upright position. He has developed the muscles of
-the back, called the erectores spinae, and those of the buttocks to hold
-him erect. Leonardo intended to enlarge upon his studies of comparative
-anatomy to include all living creatures, even the insects.
-
-Meanwhile, the Viceroy of Milan was becoming impatient for Leonardo's
-return. The judgment against his half-brothers had been settled in
-Leonardo's favor, and he hastened back to Milan. By the summer of 1508
-he was once more in the routine of the court's activities. King Louis
-had granted Leonardo a regular allowance and it was the first time he
-had enjoyed such a long freedom from the concerns of earning a living.
-With these steady payments Leonardo now had the leisure and support to
-pursue his own multitude of interests.
-
-As his notes began to take shape and he thought of printing them, it was
-natural for the inventive Leonardo to design his own printing press. It
-is one of the earliest such designs on record. Because the carrying bed
-which held the type and the paper was automatically adjusted to the
-handlebar, the press could be operated by one man. Besides his notes
-Leonardo also considered printing a work by Roger Bacon, the thirteenth
-century English scientist.
-
-This project for printing his own books, however, was never realized by
-Leonardo. Lately, he had received a commission which took him back in
-memory to the days of Ludovico. The subject was Marshal Gian Giacomo
-Trivulzio, a soldier-of-fortune. Originally this man was a loyal
-commander of Galeazzo Sforza's but when Ludovico came to power he had
-had Trivulzio banished from Milan. Embittered, Trivulzio had become a
-stubborn enemy of Ludovico from that time on, serving under any banner
-that marched against the house of Sforza. A stocky, square-faced man,
-his body was covered with the scars of many battles. He had been
-fighting with the French ever since the time Ludovico had betrayed
-Charles VIII. Trivulzio had seen the great monument that Leonardo had
-modeled and, although it was riddled by French arrows and damaged by
-wind and rain, the Marshal was impressed and wished for a similar
-memorial to himself.
-
-Leonardo set to work immediately. His past experience with the Sforza
-monument was now to his advantage. This time there was no need for
-experimenting. He knew how much material he needed and the approximate
-cost of everything including the casting. He submitted an estimate of
-three thousand and forty--six ducats for the completed work, one hundred
-of which would go to Leonardo. The sum was acceptable to Trivulzio and
-Leonardo began his preliminary studies.
-
-As he gathered the material for this new equestrian statue, Leonardo and
-the French Viceroy Charles d'Amboise became interested in the further
-canalization of the plains of Lombardy. The use of canals and locks had
-been in practice for roughly a hundred years and around Milan there were
-already some fifty miles of canals and about twenty-five locks. Leonardo
-started another survey of the area. In his imagination, he envisioned a
-vast hydraulic engineering project.
-
-On September 12, 1508 Leonardo announced in his notes the beginning of a
-book on the nature of water. He had decided to separate this book from
-the one on hydraulics because it was necessary to separate theory and
-practice. His pages treating the science of hydraulics, or the practical
-applications of water power, had reached to "forty books of benefits."
-By the spring of 1509 he had expanded his notes on the nature of water
-to include the greatest wave to the smallest raindrop.
-
-Concerning the practical applications of water power, Leonardo put forth
-many designs for new locks. He introduced new methods of raising the
-gates by windlasses and chains which could easily be set in motion by
-one man. But most important is Leonardo's discovery of the use of
-centrifugal force for draining marshes--the ancestor of the centrifugal
-pump. When you rapidly rotate a stick in a pail of water, the water
-spins in a spiral rising on the sides, and, if you rotate the stick fast
-enough it bares the bottom of the pail. When you remove the stick
-suddenly, the water continues to whirl as it slowly subsides.
-
-This is basically the same principle Leonardo used to raise the water
-from a marsh to a level above the sea so that it could be drained away.
-
-The centrifugal pump was also used with a hydraulic screw which
-converted water power to mechanical power. The force of a stream of
-water was injected into the base of a vertical cylinder. In the base of
-this cylinder was a six-bladed propeller mounted on a vertical shaft.
-The force of the water turned the screw and at the same time the water
-was forced to rise in the cylinder to an outlet above. The turning
-propeller revolved the vertical shaft. This shaft, emerging from the top
-of the cylinder, turned a cogged wheel. This wheel was joined to another
-cogged wheel mounted on a horizontal shaft, thus providing the
-mechanical power. Not only is this the forerunner of the turbine, but
-the use of the propeller, itself, for propulsion in water, was a new
-idea not to be thought of again until the eighteenth century. For
-certain types of hydraulic pumps he conceived of the cone-headed mitre
-valve still in use today.
-
-Leonardo, besides studying the practical applications of water power,
-explored the very nature of water itself. In his proposed books on this
-subject he intended to examine why clouds and fog form, why rain falls
-and the raindrop itself--even how the raindrop is held together. He
-understood the nature of capillary attraction, which holds the raindrop
-together, and his notes show us that he was exploring the science of
-hydrostatics which relates to the pressure and equilibrium of liquids in
-general.
-
-Now that Leonardo had a steady income and the relief from meeting
-painting commissions by fixed dates, he was free to explore his other
-favorite avenues of knowledge. It seemed that his ever-active mind could
-never stop roaming over the whole field of scientific knowledge. He
-continued with his early interests--the nature and movement of air,
-astronomy and geometry. He was also still concerned with movement and
-weight, for he set down in his notes, "The thing which moves will be so
-much the more difficult to stop as it is of greater weight." This is a
-hint at a principle formulated by Isaac Newton almost two hundred years
-later in his First Law of Motion--the law concerning inertia. For
-example, the motion of an arrow shot into the air maintains itself in
-flight so long as the influence of the initial force is maintained in
-it.
-
- [Illustration: _Da Vinci's cone-headed mitre valve for use in a
- hydraulic pump._]
-
-On a note dated April 28, 1509 he wrote, "Having for a long time sought
-to square the angle of two curved sides ... I have solved the
-proposition at ten o'clock on the evening of Sunday." As always,
-Leonardo was deeply involved in the study of mathematics. Too deep
-perhaps to recognize the new rumblings of war.
-
-Louis XII, still pursuing his campaign in northern Italy, had again
-arrived in Milan amid the salutes of the French artillery. Following his
-personal banner of a gold porcupine on a white field, he had come back
-prepared to do battle with the Venetians whose power, as it diminished
-in the east, was extending westward into Italy. Alarmed at this Venetian
-expansion, the French King had allied himself with Pope Julius II and
-the powers of Europe to form the League of Cambrai to push back this
-threat. Charles d'Amboise, the French Viceroy, had already taken to the
-field and at the castle of Cassano, overlooking the Adda river near
-Milan, he awaited the arrival of his king.
-
-By the end of May, Leonardo was in the saddle once more. Surrounded by
-the best knights of France and the nobles of Milan, he personally
-accompanied the French King as military engineer to the meeting with the
-Viceroy of Milan at Cassano.
-
-During the next three months, through the battles and defeat of the
-Venetians at Aquadello where sixteen thousand dead were left on the
-field, and the siege of Caravaggio and the capture of Peschiera,
-Leonardo served as military consultant and map maker. More than ever his
-eye was attracted to the possibilities of utilizing the many rivers they
-crossed both for warfare and commerce. He envisioned making the Adda
-river navigable from Milan to Lake Como. During this time, he devised
-not only a revolving bridge but even one of two layers in a single
-span--the upper level for pedestrians and the lower one for vehicles.
-
-By July, Leonardo had returned with the king and the French army to
-Milan. Here was planned a great celebration of the French victory over
-the Venetians. In front of the cathedral, to the delight of the hundreds
-of spectators, Leonardo devised a mechanical lion scaring a dragon out
-of an artificial lake into the beak of a cock which picked the dragon's
-eyes out. After the festivities Leonardo returned to his everyday work.
-In time, he had a thriving workshop and as he became more and more
-preoccupied with his scientific explorations, his art commissions were
-turned over to his assistants. He did continue, however, to work on the
-plans for Marshal Trivulzio's monument and in his preparatory work for
-this assignment he expanded his notes and drawings of comparative
-anatomy.
-
-This renewed interest in anatomy led him to attend a lecture in the
-winter of 1509. The lecturer was Marcantonio della Torre, a young man in
-his late twenties and one of the best-known anatomists of the times. He
-had been a professor at the University of Padua, but this city had
-fallen into the hands of the Venetians. Marcantonio was forced to flee
-Padua and had settled at Pavia. The two men, when they met, recognized
-in each other a devotion to science and they began a professional
-collaboration that grew into a friendship. Leonardo now developed his
-anatomy studies to the point where he is today recognized as the
-foremost medical anatomist of the Renaissance.
-
-Returning to his dissections, Leonardo now proceeded to explore the
-heart and system of veins in the human body. His drawings of the heart
-are nearly perfect. Indeed, he was probably the first to discover the
-endocardium membrane that sheathes the valves and sinews of the heart.
-Also, he pictured and described the moderator band, "the first cause of
-the motion of the heart." His work on this organ led him to the doorstep
-of discovering the circulation of the blood--later to be carried out by
-William Harvey in the seventeenth century.
-
-Further, Leonardo was the first to accurately draw a representation of
-the _foetus_, or unborn child, in the womb of its mother, writing in his
-notes that, "we conclude therefore, that a single soul governs the
-bodies and nourishes the two." In addition, he drew a remarkable picture
-of the female figure and for the first time accurately placed her
-organic structure. In his notes, he also pointed the way to the laws
-governing metabolism when he wrote, "The body of anything whatsoever
-that receives nourishment continually dies and is continually
-renewed...." By pouring wax into a hole in the skull he made the first
-casts of the ventricles of the brain. Several hundred years were to pass
-before this method was rediscovered.
-
-As Leonardo's work progressed, his admiration for the complexity of the
-human body grew. Many times in the middle of explaining a section of
-anatomy he inserted a sentence or two of wonder or praise at the
-magnificent creation that is the human being. Indeed, these drawings and
-notes represent the sum of many, many dissections; moreover, Leonardo
-had to work under conditions that placed many obstacles in his path--the
-crude lights and instruments, the difficulties of obtaining corpses and,
-above all, the opposition of the superstitious and ignorant.
-
-The following year Leonardo entered in his notes, "This winter of the
-year 1510 I look to finish all this anatomy." And yet, however sincerely
-he might express such a wish, Leonardo was a person who was literally
-never "finished." The scientific and artistic tasks he had chosen for
-himself were clearly beyond the limits of any one man. Besides, the
-pressures of the outside world were once more threatening the peace and
-quiet of his home and work.
-
-Pope Julius II became increasingly fearful of the French victories over
-the Venetians. Secretly, he concluded a peace with Venice and, allying
-himself with his former enemy, he now turned against the French. When
-the conflict continued, Charles d'Amboise, the patron of Leonardo, was
-killed at the battle of Correggio. He was replaced by a new French
-Viceroy, Gaston de Foix. Although the Pope now hired Swiss mercenaries,
-this invasion from the North was defeated by the young Gaston. Not to be
-outdone, the Pope then brought in Spanish troops.
-
-In the ensuing bloody battle at Ravenna, the French completely defeated
-the armies of the Pope and Spain, despite their use of battle-cars armed
-with razor-sharp sickles on their wheels--strangely like the early
-inventions that Leonardo designed for Lorenzo de' Medici! Although the
-French were victorious, they lost their brilliant young leader, Gaston
-de Foix, and with him they lost their heart. As a result, they were soon
-disorganized. The Pope's armies renewed their attacks, and the French
-began a long retreat.
-
-Once again the plague infested Milan and Leonardo's friend, Marcantonio
-della Torre, died of it. After some futile attempts at recovery, the
-French fled across the Alps and with them went Marshal Trivulzio. Milan
-was left temporarily under the martial rule of the Swiss, and Leonardo
-with only his few apprentices was left again without a patron.
-
-Tired and prematurely old at sixty-one, Leonardo resignedly gathered his
-possessions together once more and with Francesco de' Melzi and four of
-his loyal pupils, he turned his back on Milan for the last time. The
-date was September 29, 1513. Their destination was Rome.
-
-
-
-
- 12
- _Rome_
-
-
-"Name?"
-
-"Leonardo da Vinci."
-
-"Where from and where are you staying?"
-
-"We are coming from Milan by way of Florence. I have quarters being
-prepared for me at the Belvedere in the Vatican--by order of the Pope.
-Now, young man, let us pass."
-
-The guard at the Porta del Popolo changed his manner. He dropped his
-halberd and motioned to the other guards to let the riders through. He
-touched his helmet roughly and with a grin he said,
-
-"I'm sorry, Sire--but you know how it is. All these people--there's
-bound to be them that we don't want here. Go ahead, your Excellency.
-Make way there!"
-
-With these words he laid his spear against a jostling group of
-broad-hatted pilgrims blocking the entrance to the city of Rome.
-
-Leonardo heeled his horse and with Francesco de' Melzi at his side,
-followed by his servant and students, pushed past the crowd at the gate.
-To the left rose the Pincio hill with its stately pines where, in the
-days of Imperial Rome, Lucullus had walked in his gardens. But Leonardo
-had no time to look about. It was a damp December day, and rain
-threatened from the gray skies. He was tired, and as Francesco glanced
-at him he could see Leonardo pull his cape around him with a little
-shiver as the chill wind stirred the long, graying hair on his
-shoulders. They made their way through the crowded, noisy city. They
-crossed the Tiber and rode past Castel' Sant' Angelo, the papal fortress
-built on the tomb of Emperor Hadrian. After another inspection by the
-Swiss guards in beribboned uniforms of white, green and gold under their
-shining breastplates, they entered the walls of the Vatican. That
-evening after he had settled himself in the Belvedere apartments and
-dinner had been eaten, Leonardo, gazing into the embers of the fire,
-looked back over his new stroke of fortune.
-
-The Medicis had returned to power. Pope Julius II had died, and Giovanni
-de' Medici, son of Lorenzo, had become Pope Leo X at the age of
-thirty-seven. With his election to the head of the Christian world, the
-Republic of Florence became a city of the Medicis once more and Leonardo
-had received an appointment in Rome. Giuliano de' Medici, Pope Leo's
-favorite younger brother, in his new rise to power and wealth, became
-Leonardo's patron. The two must have met sometime during the Medici's
-exile. Leonardo was given the apartments in the Vatican and a salary of
-thirty-three ducats (approximately eighty-five dollars) a month and a
-workshop was fitted for him and his pupils. He was also assigned an
-exclusive German assistant named Georg.
-
-The Pope's court in the Vatican was like the Medici court in the
-Florence of Leonardo's youth--multiplied by hundreds. Leo X saw himself
-as the center of the artistic world, and being a man of luxurious tastes
-with the wealth of the church behind him, the Vatican was soon filled
-with a mixture of the wise and foolish. Pompous classic-quoters,
-third-rate poets and clowns mixed with the world's scholars and
-statesmen. The two greatest artists were Bramante, the architect and
-friend of Leonardo's first years in Milan, and Bramante's pupil Raphael,
-the painter.
-
-Bramante was busy building the new church of St. Peter's and, as the
-architect of this favorite project of the Popes, he was sole master of
-the Roman art world. Raphael, as his protege, was the recipient of the
-better painting commissions in Rome. The elderly Bramante and the
-thirty-year-old assistant were a famous pair in the Rome of 1513.
-Equally as famous, however, was Michelangelo; he was still living in
-Rome, but was without patronage after Julius II's death. Leonardo's old
-rival had scored his triumph with his extraordinary paintings in the
-Sistine Chapel.
-
-Although the young Raphael, who owed so much to the example of Leonardo,
-now rode through the streets as a wealthy nobleman, Leonardo himself
-received no great commissions. While Pope Leo was indulgent of his
-brother's whims he himself had no use for this tall, serious old man who
-roamed the shaded walks of the Vatican poking at the strange plants in
-the botanical garden or making drawings of the foreign animals in the
-private zoo. In reality, Leonardo's patron, Giuliano de' Medici was a
-weak man. He played at being a patron but, like his brother the Pope, he
-lacked the force and decision of his famous father Lorenzo.
-Nevertheless, he did give Leonardo one small commission for a picture.
-Immediately Leonardo, excited by the exotic plants in the Vatican
-gardens, commenced to experiment with them to find a resin to make a
-varnish with which to cover the future painting. Pope Leo made fun of
-him exclaiming, to the delight of his court, "This man will never get
-anything done, he thinks of the end before the beginning."
-
-This ridicule by the Pope made Leonardo a joke to many in the circles of
-the Vatican who were a little afraid of this strange man with the
-searching eyes. Leonardo also suffered the humiliations of a man who did
-not conform to the fashions of his day. His knowledge of Latin, for
-example, was weak and although he could read it with the help of a
-dictionary he could not speak it. And, among the people who surrounded
-the Pope, Latin was the only language allowed. Prizes of great sums of
-money and important positions were often granted on the strength of an
-improvised speech in Latin (with many quotations from the classical
-authors) or a flattering Latin verse. Faced with such setbacks and
-ridicule, Leonardo--not surprisingly--began to withdraw into himself.
-
-And yet, Leonardo refused to remain idle--he had to work. The need for
-mirrors in the vast halls and rooms of the papal palace was great.
-Leonardo turned his mechanical skill to redesigning and improving
-methods of making them, and even inventing his own machines for the
-grinding of the glass. Also, for Giuliano, who dabbled in alchemy and
-magic, he made distorting mirrors and burning lenses. In addition,
-Leonardo invented a machine which could be run hydraulically for
-producing long strips of copper of equal width for use in soldering the
-mirrors.
-
-But, with the making of these mirrors, Leonardo began to run into
-trouble with his German assistant, Georg. The boy was a loafer; he spoke
-little Italian and took every opportunity to spend his days with his
-countrymen in the Swiss guard. Leonardo tried to alter the situation by
-suggesting that the boy have his meals with him at his worktable, thus
-giving Georg a better chance to learn the language. This however did not
-appeal to him. Then, because Leonardo's inventions were so
-extraordinary, he began to give away the secrets of their mechanisms to
-Johannes the mirror-maker, another German, who had been replaced by
-Leonardo in the favors of Giuliano. This naturally made Johannes jealous
-of Leonardo. Georg gossiped, too, and told stories about the old,
-eccentric man who lived like a miser in the midst of all the luxury and
-who drew crazy circles on pages of paper.
-
-These "crazy circles" were geometric exercises that had fascinated
-Leonardo from the time he had wandered across Italy with Fra Luca
-Pacioli. Pacioli's book _De Divina Proportione_, containing sixty
-illustrations from designs of Leonardo, had been published in Venice in
-1509. Leonardo intended to entitle these geometric exercises _De Ludo
-Geometrico_. In geometry a lune is a crescent-shaped figure bounded by
-two intersecting arcs of circles on a plane or a sphere. Leonardo drew
-pages of these lunes and then proceeded to transform their curvilinear
-figures into squares of equal area. He also reviewed Archimedes' method
-of squaring a circle and developed it into a variety of ways for cubing
-spheres and cylinders.
-
-He returned as well to formulating theories of friction. He wrote in his
-notes, "the tallest wheel is the easiest to pull"--for example, a big
-wheel turning at the same speed as a smaller one has less friction to
-overcome because it makes less revolutions. His experiments in friction
-predated men like Amontons and Coulomb by two and three centuries. He
-established a formula for the building arch which he described as "a
-strength caused by two weaknesses"--if one half of an arch is removed,
-the other half collapses. They support and give strength to each other.
-In addition, Leonardo determined, before Galileo, the center of gravity
-of any pyramid and of a tetrahedral, or four-sided body.
-
-As the days went by and he waited for commissions to come, Leonardo took
-to wandering about the streets of Rome. He stood in the half-buried
-Forum of the Caesars surrounded by grazing sheep and grunting pigs.
-Wooden shacks where crude cartwheels were made and where the marble from
-the ancient temples was cut and sold, were built against the sides of
-crumbling ruins. The old triumphal arches, now overgrown with creepers,
-were boarded into towers and cattle were penned between the shafts of
-columns that once supported the grandeur of temple roofs. Here and there
-a classical scholar would be sketching or writing from the worn, Latin
-inscriptions on a marble slab tilted crazily from the ground where it
-had fallen hundreds of years ago. Goats wandered on the Palatine hill,
-once the home of Emperors, and the great baths of the Emperor Diocletian
-were now a deer park and a hunting ground for royalty.
-
-During the course of these wanderings, Leonardo became interested in the
-primitive methods of carpentry. Such things as screws, for example, were
-rare. Those that were used were either made of wood or, if of metal, by
-goldsmiths laboriously making each one by hand, soldering wire around a
-pin and another wire into the hole to hold the screw. Sometimes they
-were made by filing pieces of metal individually. All these methods were
-time-consuming and costly.
-
-Leonardo had thought of this problem before, and now he concentrated on
-perfecting his ideas about it. Previously, he had thought of casting the
-metal in wooden molds and then turning the metal on thread-cutters. The
-designs he finally drew in careful detail, however, are essentially the
-methods used today. The new machines did with a few turns of a handle
-and adjustments of a few cogged wheels what it took one man many hours
-to perform. He also drew designs for a mechanical plane and a machine
-for drawing wire that worked by water power.
-
-Leonardo now lived and worked in the Belvedere of the Vatican--more a
-man on exhibition than an active participant in the great artistic
-activities taking place around him. True, he received his thirty-three
-ducats a month, but Michelangelo had been paid three thousand for his
-work in the Sistine Chapel, while Raphael had earned twelve thousand for
-each room he painted in the Vatican.
-
- [Illustration: _Leonardo became interested in various methods of
- carpentry._]
-
-Thus Leonardo drifted farther and farther away from his painting. This,
-in itself, caused people to talk in the papal city. For he had earned
-fame as a painter, but his passion for science was regarded as strange
-and whimsical. Occasionally, he did receive a small commission from the
-workshop of Raphael, yet these were like the crumbs from a rich man's
-table.
-
-Even the toys Leonardo made at this period for the amusement of his
-patrons were looked upon as somewhat weird. For example, he would take
-small pieces of wax and mold them into strange little animals and then
-inflate them so that they floated in the air in front of a startled
-guest. Once he caught a curious lizard in the garden and spent hours
-putting scales all over the tiny body, attached to it a little beard and
-horns, then let it out from a box at a banquet. The guests jumped back
-with fear and the women became hysterical.
-
-One of Leonardo's jokes that has been passed down in accounts of his
-life at this period must have created quite a sensation. He showed the
-company the cleaned entrails of a sheep resting on the palm of his hand.
-After telling them to wait and watch he took the entrails in another
-room and with a bellows inflated them with warm air. As the entrails
-filled with air they expanded and extended. They crept into the room
-where the company waited. Slowly they grew and grew until they began to
-fill the room. The guests overturned their chairs in their hurry to get
-out of the way of this shapeless, translucent creature. Then Leonardo
-appeared, the air-filled entrails giving way before him, and said:
-
-"Sires, this is but an example and symbol of virtue. As you can see, the
-smallest virtue is capable of the greatest growth."
-
-The guests laughed, but it was an uncomfortable laugh. Thus another
-story was added to the legend of Leonardo as an odd old man.
-
-Leonardo, whose work--particularly his anatomical studies--had
-constantly been interrupted by the fortunes of war, had found another
-hospital in Rome where he could continue these studies. This time it was
-his intention to write a treatise on speech. He dissected and drew the
-anatomy of the larynx (the voice box), the vocal cords and the trachea
-(the air passage to the lungs), and all the muscles that control the
-movements of the tongue and the lips. If you pronounce each letter of
-the alphabet you will feel these muscles of the lips, especially with
-the letters "o," "p," and "f." Carefully he noted how the air vibrations
-from the trachea form themselves into vowels and consonants, and he drew
-the membrane which, when air is pressed against it, makes the sound
-"aah."
-
-At this same time he was also busy finishing a treatise on painting
-which he had begun when he was working on the "Last Supper" for Ludovico
-Sforza. But it was for his knowledge of military engineering that he was
-sent to the city of Parma by the Pope on September 25, 1514. Here he
-stayed at the Bell Inn while examining the fortifications and other
-defenses of the city.
-
-Leonardo's patron, Giuliano de' Medici, had been appointed governor of
-this particular area and, since Pope Leo X was fearful of two powerful
-countries, France and Spain, he was preparing the papal territory
-against possible invasion. Another fear of the Pope--and indeed of
-everybody in Rome--was malaria, the disease carried by the mosquitoes
-that bred in the Pontine marshes west and southwest of the city. At that
-time, however, no one knew the cause was mosquitoes; rather, they
-thought it was the bad air from the marshes.
-
-As Leonardo had already been effective in draining the pestilential
-marshes of Piombino for Cesare Borgia and, later, those around Milan for
-Charles d'Amboise, he was assigned the same task for the Pontine
-marshes. He surveyed the entire area to the sea and made another
-extraordinary aerial type map. His recommendations included draining the
-entire area, enlarging and regulating the Martino river and cutting an
-extra outlet from the river Livoli to the sea. These plans were adopted
-some years later and parts of the marshes were drained successfully,
-yielding new land for the cultivation of crops.
-
-By December of 1514 Leonardo had finished his treatise on speech and,
-possibly in an effort to attract the attention of the Pope, he submitted
-it to the Privy-Chamberlain, Battista dell'Aquila. As Pope Leo was
-surrounded by an army of secretaries and assistants who passed on
-everything submitted, this manuscript with its beautiful drawings was
-mislaid and lost and only a few notes and sketches remain.
-
-The continual discouragement of his life in Rome was offset by a visit
-from his half-brother, Giuliano, around Christmas. Leonardo was held in
-esteem by his family despite the quarrel over his father's and his uncle
-Francesco's will, and his half-brothers were pleased to tell of their
-famous relative who lived in the Belvedere as guest of the Medicis. Yet
-they knew little of Leonardo's scientific dreams and his lack of
-recognition in the papal city.
-
-Often, Leonardo's greatest comfort was to return to his notes. The
-challenge of geometry and the mysteries of the movement of air and water
-kept him from brooding about his lonely life. Francesco de' Melzi,
-Leonardo's young friend, had more and more taken over the practical
-responsibilities of his everyday life. Except for his workshop, where
-the troublesome Georg worked at the making of mirrors, and an occasional
-small commission for a painting, Leonardo was free to study.
-
-In addition to his geometrical investigations, Leonardo now experimented
-with the science of _statics_ (objects that are stationary), and
-_dynamics_ (objects in motion). One of his most important discoveries in
-the science of mechanics came about during this period. Concerning the
-division of weight, he wrote, "There are three conditions of gravity of
-which the one is its simple natural gravity, the second is its
-accidental gravity, the third the friction produced by it. But the
-natural weight is in itself unchangeable, the accidental which is joined
-to it is of infinite force, and the friction varies according to the
-places wherein it occurs, namely rough or smooth places." Thus he
-realized and formulated what composes the movement of an object. He
-found that movement is the result of separate forces acting upon the
-object from different directions, as for example, the initial push, the
-pull of gravity and the resistance of friction. And, before Galileo,
-Leonardo further experimented with objects dropped from a height. As the
-result of repeated experiments, he noted that the fall was being
-affected by the earth's rotation. That is, the object dropped always
-fell in a slight eastward direction rather than vertically downward--a
-fact later proved conclusively by Isaac Newton and Robert Hooke in the
-next century.
-
-He also became fascinated with spiral motion, such as is found in a
-spinning top or in a whirlpool of water. Because of his interest in
-_hydrodynamics_, or the movement of water, he began to sketch imaginary
-"Deluge compositions." These were drawings showing the world--probably
-inspired by the Bible--in a chaos of wind and floods. They were based on
-his years of scientific research. Indeed, his drawings of actual
-whirlpools are still among the greatest of his scientific art. Today,
-with all the latest technical aids, such as dusting a whirlpool with
-powdered rosin and then photographing it, an accurate three-dimensional
-picture is impossible. Yet Leonardo, by sheer observation and analysis
-coupled with his genius for drawing, could reproduce the complicated
-shape of whirling water.
-
-In the relatedness of his explorations of water, air and movement, and
-weight, he worked out the similarity between the laws of equilibrium
-controlling solids and liquids. The equation between the motive force
-and resistance that makes for equilibrium or balance in solids can be
-compared to the equation between the upward pressure of liquids and the
-downward pressure exerted on them.
-
-Far into the night Leonardo worked on his papers. He tired more easily
-now, and his eyes had grown weaker. To provide the increase in light
-that his failing eyesight demanded, he had improved on his original oil
-lamp by making the wick rise as the oil was burned away, and he had
-extra lamps fitted to the ceiling.
-
-On January 9, 1515 Leonardo wrote in his notes, "Il Magnifico Giuliano
-de' Medici set out on the ninth day of January 1515 at daybreak from
-Rome, to go and marry a wife in Savoy. And on that day came the news of
-the death of the King of France (Louis XII)." This meant that his new
-patron had left and his old patron had died. Leonardo's note was a sad
-one and perhaps he felt, in the departure of his patron, more alone than
-ever in the crowded life of the Vatican. Giuliano, on the urging of his
-brother, was marrying Philiberta of Savoy, in an effort to strengthen
-the prestige of the Medici. Louis XII, before he died, had formed a
-league against Spain, and with the marriage of the Pope's brother to a
-noble house of France, the league would be strengthened by keeping the
-Pope on the side of France. Actually Pope Leo was playing both sides,
-for at the time he was also friendly with Spain.
-
-
-Shortly after Giuliano's departure from Rome, Leonardo fell ill,
-presumably from a mild heart attack complicated by a touch of malarial
-fever. The doctor had been called. It was a warning, the doctor told
-Francesco de' Melzi, and Leonardo must remain quiet for quite awhile.
-
-By the end of the winter Leonardo was back on his feet and apparently
-feeling completely well again. Giuliano himself had fallen ill about the
-same time and the news that he had recovered and was finally returning
-to Rome cheered Leonardo. He sat down and wrote a long letter to his
-patron expressing his joy. This letter also included a long list of
-complaints against Georg and Johannes. Georg was now using his room in
-Leonardo's apartment to do work for others. He lied to Leonardo and flew
-into such a rage when he was questioned that no one could go near him.
-Moreover, Johannes, the mirror-maker, was now moving back into the
-Vatican and turning out mirrors for everyone, even using Georg's room as
-his own workroom. Johannes boasted of his skill and told everybody that
-Leonardo did not know what he was doing. Thus, it was not surprising
-that Leonardo, in his long complaint, was taking out the anger and
-frustration he felt against all the injustices of his life in Rome.
-
-But by summer Leonardo was again employed as a military engineer.
-Francis I had succeeded to the throne of France. The new French King was
-anxious to secure his lost title to the Dukedom of Milan and was
-preparing another invasion of Italy. Pope Leo X, still trying to play
-both sides at once, was making secret agreements with Francis while at
-the same time joining the King of Spain, Milan, Genoa, and the Swiss in
-an alliance against France. Consequently, he sent Leonardo out to
-inspect the fortifications of Civitavecchia, a city on the Tyrrhenian
-coast not too far from Rome. When, in August, Francis I crossed into
-Italy with an army of thirty-five thousand men including Marshal
-Trivulzio, the Pope ordered his brother, Giuliano, to take command of
-the papal forces. On the way to assume this command, Giuliano fell ill
-and collapsed. His sickness this time was soon to be fatal.
-
-Leonardo returned to Rome with his survey of Civitavecchia, where he
-immediately learned of his patron's latest illness. Perhaps realizing
-that Giuliano was fatally ill, Leonardo made a desperate effort to gain
-the recognition he felt should be his. He entered the competition for a
-new faade of San Lorenzo in Florence. Among the other competitors was
-Michelangelo, his younger and yet oldest rival.
-
-In October of 1515, Francis I had recaptured Milan and by Christmas was
-in Rome. Leonardo may have met the new King of France in Bologna where
-Pope Leo X had personally traveled in order to settle a peace treaty
-with France. Certainly it is known that he attended Francis' court in
-Rome. Leonardo's name was well respected in French circles and, as
-Francis had already admired the pictures by Leonardo, the meeting was a
-happy occasion for them both. Indeed, the recognition that Leonardo had
-sought in his native land was never as great as that accorded to him by
-the French.
-
-As Francis I prepared to leave for France in January he must have
-offered Leonardo a position at his court. While he still hoped that
-Giuliano de' Medici would recover from his illness and return to Rome,
-Francis' offer gave him support in the knowledge that he had a powerful,
-new friend.
-
-March of 1516 brought the first of three events that were to change the
-course of Leonardo's last years. Giuliano de' Medici died, leaving
-Leonardo not only without a patron, but without a friend in the Vatican.
-Now sixty-four years old, he was reluctant to leave his comfortable
-quarters in the Belvedere with its workshop and pleasant gardens.
-Besides, deep within himself, he felt that Rome could still offer him
-the fame that had always escaped him.
-
-Spring ripened into summer and the second event occurred. The
-competition for the new faade of San Lorenzo in Florence was won by
-Michelangelo. To Leonardo the news was a blow. The success of his old
-rival weakened his position in the Vatican even further and added to the
-growing hostility he had felt in the people surrounding the Pope.
-
-The third event was the sum of many small events. Georg and his friend
-Johannes, in their jealousy, had spread much gossip about Leonardo in
-court circles. They now took advantage of Giuliano's death to circulate
-stories about Leonardo's dissections of bodies in the hospital. These
-were added to vicious gossip that Leonardo was pro-French. This news
-eventually reached Pope Leo X. The Pope himself was perfectly aware of
-the practice of dissection and, personally, he had turned his eyes the
-other way. However, as dissection was contrary to Church doctrine, an
-official complaint to the head of the Church could not be ignored. The
-Pope used it as an excuse to be rid of this tiresome old man whom he had
-tolerated only for his brother's sake. Leonardo was abandoned.
-
-The year 1516 was drawing to a close. Leonardo had decided to seek the
-patronage offered him by Francis I. So he and Francesco de' Melzi, his
-loyal young friend, left Rome for the long journey into France. As he
-left his native land for the last time, Leonardo looked back over his
-years--from the silver lute that had sent him to Milan, to the death of
-Giuliano, to the final rejection of Pope Leo X. Remembering how Lorenzo
-de' Medici had sent him to Ludovico so many years before, Leonardo
-thought to himself with great sadness, "The Medici created and destroyed
-me."
-
-
-
-
- 13
- _The Last Years_
-
-
-Leonardo looked around from where he was leaning on the parapet of the
-Chateau d'Amboise to watch a group of young lords and ladies playing
-croquet on the emerald-green lawn. The click of the mallets and balls
-was mingled with the shouts and laughter of the young people. It was
-late afternoon in May and although the sun was warm the breeze from the
-west was chilly. Leonardo looked down again from the sheer height of the
-castle wall across the wide sweep of the Loire river and the valley
-extending as far as the eye could see. Swallows were swooping low over
-the banks below and the wind carried their shrilling cries up to him.
-The forested islands and sandbars interrupted the steady flow of the
-river and Leonardo could see the reflections sway in the current. He had
-been studying the river but he realized that his aging eyes were not up
-to the task of concentrating for long. The wind made them water, so he
-turned away and started back to his home.
-
-There was much that was familiar in the castle at Amboise. The thick,
-high walls and round towers and especially the graceful, lacy spires of
-the king's residence brought back much that he had known in his native
-land. The gardens had been planted by Italians--there were orange trees
-and even a mulberry tree from his beloved plains of Lombardy. The king's
-residence and chapel had been constructed and the decorations carved in
-stone by Italian artisans. Leonardo could stop and talk in his native
-tongue with many of the men employed by the king. Since the time of
-Charles VIII, the French had brought in the latest Renaissance styles
-from Italy. Leonardo's steps took him back from the castle grounds and
-down a path with a hand-railing. The steep roofs of the town of Amboise
-with their chimneys could be seen below him. The path led to a small
-manor house, like a miniature castle with sharp spires and lacy,
-carved-stone gables that was set in green lawns and gravel paths.
-
-The Manoir de Cloux, as Leonardo's house was called, had been a hunting
-lodge for Francis I, but when Leonardo had arrived he gave the house to
-Leonardo for his home. Francis, in his admiration for this great man,
-also gave him seven hundred crowns a year, together with a pension of
-four hundred for Francesco de' Melzi.
-
- [Illustration: _Leonardo at Chateau d'Amboise on the Loire._]
-
-The long journey from Rome had left Leonardo tired and weak and he had
-fallen ill again shortly after his arrival. This time the attack was
-more serious and had left him with his right hand permanently crippled.
-He looked at it now as he opened the door to his room. "Another
-warning," he thought, "and there's still so much to do."
-
-The young, robust King Francis was everywhere at once. He gloried in
-knightly tournaments, hunts, and sports of all kinds. Always restless,
-he might appear at any place unannounced. Frequently there would be a
-clamor at the gates of Leonardo's home and the king would ride in with
-one or two of his nobles. With a great jingling of spurs he would bound
-up the stairs of the manor house calling for Leonardo. He delighted in
-long talks with the old man, and would listen respectfully as Leonardo,
-his deep-set eyes brooding over his notes, would demonstrate some
-scientific point on a blank sheet of paper.
-
-At this time, Leonardo was engaged on three projects which demanded his
-immediate attention. One was the entertainment for a banquet that
-Francis was giving for his sister, Marguerite de Valois, and her
-husband. Another was a new design for the king's castle at Amboise, and
-the third was a design for making a navigable waterway from Amboise to
-Romorantin. Although these three projects were the main ones that
-occupied Leonardo's time, there was always the supervising of his
-pupils' painting on the walls in the little chapel of the manor house,
-his own work on a painting of St. John the Baptist, and the continual
-ordering and revising of his notes.
-
-The banquet took place in October of 1517, and the mechanical lion
-Leonardo had made was an immediate success. It "walked" by means of a
-spring motor, into the hall, opening and closing its fierce mouth while
-swaying its head from side to side. With a wand that he had been given,
-Francis I stepped down from his seat and tapped the lion three times.
-The toy fell apart and from it a cascade of white lilies poured out at
-the king's feet.
-
-Also at this time there was a distinguished guest at the castle of
-Amboise. He was a fellow-countryman of Leonardo and his name was
-Cardinal Luigi d'Aragona. With him was his secretary Antonio de' Beatis.
-As Leonardo was now a famous member of King Francis' court, the cardinal
-paid him a visit accompanied by Antonio. The extraordinary anatomy
-drawings and all his notes were shown to the cardinal; he and his
-secretary were deeply impressed. They were also surprised to learn that
-Leonardo had never been accorded the same recognition by his own
-countrymen. Antonio de' Beatis wrote home that "This gentleman has
-written a treatise on anatomy, showing by illustrations the members,
-muscles, nerves, veins, joints, intestines and whatever else is to
-discuss in the bodies of men and women, in a way that has never yet been
-done by anyone else. All this we have seen with our own eyes; and he
-said that he had dissected more than thirty bodies, both of men and
-women of all ages. He has also written of the nature of water, and of
-divers machines, and of other matters which he has set down in an
-endless number of volumes, all in the vulgar tongue [meaning Italian not
-Latin], which, if they be published, will be profitable and delightful."
-
-By now Leonardo had accumulated thousands of pages of notes, and they
-lay stacked in all manner of chests and boxes. Often now, as Leonardo
-surveyed the work of his lifetime, he realized that he would never see
-the day of their publication. Time was slipping through his fingers.
-Already summer had come and gone and now the sharp winds of fall were
-lifting the leaves from the ground in dancing whirls. Fortunately these
-were years of peace and for the first time in a long while the people
-were free of wars. The scheme to canalize the waterway to Romorantin had
-grown to a vast idea for making a thoroughfare of water from the Loire
-river all the way down France to Lyons and then into Italy! Leonardo,
-old and ailing as he was, had surveyed parts of the rivers Loire and
-Cher, braving the rough roads and crude accommodations.
-
-In addition, Leonardo had designed a castle for Francis I's widowed
-mother in Romorantin. This castle was never built, but many of the ideas
-that Leonardo had incorporated in its design were used in the gigantic
-and magnificent castle of Chambord. Also, at Francis' request, he had
-reviewed the work being done at the castle in Blois and there is reason
-to think that the beautiful outside stairwell that spirals from left to
-right might have been designed by Leonardo.
-
-In February of 1517, a son had been born to Queen Claude and Francis I.
-The king decided to postpone the baptism of the dauphin (the title given
-to the eldest son of a French King) until May of the following year. At
-that time there would be a double celebration at Amboise, for a nephew
-of Pope Leo X, the young Lorenzo de' Medici, was being married to
-Madelaine d'Auvergne. As usual, Leonardo was given the assignment of
-preparing the festivities. Although he was fond of preparing these
-entertainments, Leonardo now felt the pressure of time; for indeed, the
-interruptions of this eager young king were sometimes a hardship. He
-felt that his years were drawing to an end. His notes were unfinished
-and his dreams of extending man's knowledge of his world and of himself
-were hindered not only by such petty chores but also by the limits of
-his own physical endurance.
-
-As Leonardo was sketching one day from the window of his room where he
-could see the castle walls and the chapel of Saint-Hubert, he set aside
-the drawing for a moment to write a memorandum to himself. "Write of the
-quality of time as distinct from its mathematical divisions." Was this
-extraordinary man sensing the road down which Einstein--in his studies
-of relativity--was to travel hundreds of years later?
-
-Spring arrived again and with it came the first wild flowers and roses,
-the songs of the birds in the woods and the blossoming of the chestnut
-trees. The time for the double celebration came, too, and Leonardo was
-seen busily preparing the decorations and mechanical delights for the
-large crowds already assembling. In addition to the tournaments-at-arms
-that so delighted the king, there was to be a mock battle with a
-besieged city, and for this Leonardo had had constructed imposing castle
-walls of wood with a backdrop of a city's spires and towers. The party
-lasted for weeks, and the climax was performed on the lawns of
-Leonardo's house where a great ballroom had been set up. Here he
-repeated an earlier success, the one that had so enchanted Ludovico's
-guests so many years ago in the Sforza castle at Milan. There was again
-a dome over the ballroom across which the stars moved mechanically and
-artificial figures representing various gods and goddesses spoke and
-sang by means of a hidden choir, while the sun and moon shone in their
-own lights.
-
-This display ended the festivities. It was already late June and
-Leonardo was anxious to return to his plans for the water route to
-Italy. There was the area near Sologne which, when flooded, would make
-the surrounding countryside a marshland. This would have to be drained
-by the same method as he had planned for the Piombino and the Pontine
-marshes. Francis I was interested, too, in the improvements Leonardo had
-suggested for his own castle, and he would have to talk with the castle
-superintendent about them. As always, there seemed to be so many things
-to do, to plan, to work on. Then Leonardo wrote in his notes: "On the
-24th of June, the day of St. John, 1518, at Amboise, in the palace of
-Cloux...." and underneath, "I will continue--"
-
-"_I will continue_--" It was almost a note of defiance against the
-obstacles of advancing age and sickness and the interruptions of the
-practical world.
-
-
-The sound of jingling spurs and bridle chains and the snorting of many
-horses announced another surprise visit from the young king. Leonardo
-could hear him below shouting something to Battista, the servant who had
-come to Amboise with Leonardo. Now, as usual, Francis was running up the
-stairs with all the energy of youth shouting for "le matre" (the
-master). Resignedly and with patient humor, Leonardo stepped out to
-greet the king. The gold chains around Francis' thick neck and over his
-broad chest glinted in the semi-light of the hall, and he was holding
-his plumed hat at his side and mopping his forehead with a dainty
-embroidered handkerchief.
-
-"Master Leonardo! We are going on a tour of the river and I want you to
-look at the place that I told you about. Where I want to put that
-bridge. You remember?"
-
-"Sire, give me but a moment to gather some material together."
-
-A chest was made ready and soon Leonardo was at the door, calling to
-Francesco and Battista to help him into the saddle of his horse, while
-the king's servants hoisted the chest onto one of the carts already
-piled high with tents and provisions.
-
-When Francis was restless--which was often--a "tour" could mean many
-hours or many days of travel. Wagons were always kept ready with all the
-equipment for a long journey and Leonardo, himself, had learned to
-accept these sudden whims and kept chests of his own ready for any such
-trip. Now, as always, the king kept his horse reined back out of regard
-for this tall, stooped man with the long beard and simple clothes.
-
-Yet when Leonardo returned from this "tour" he realized that he could no
-longer make such trips. The hardships of sleeping in tents, riding over
-the hot roads, and the necessary work involved in surveying the possible
-sites for a bridge had left him almost exhausted. He had made one
-suggestion, however, and that was to build houses that could be carried
-and then assembled with a few wooden locking devices, then just as
-quickly taken down and moved to the next place. They could also be left
-standing where the country people could use them while the court was
-away. Indeed, such structures would seem to be the ancestors of our own
-prefabricated houses.
-
-The winter of 1519 was a bitter one. When the cold fog spread over the
-valley shrouding the bare trees it chilled the big, white-washed rooms
-of Cloux. The wind blew down from the north sending blasts down the
-chimneys and scattering ashes and sparks. Leonardo, huddled against the
-huge fireplace with its roof projecting into the room, pulled his black
-cloak lined in soft leather around him and reminded himself to include
-it in his will for Mathurine, the faithful domestic who cooked for him
-and took care of his house.
-
-The aged Leonardo, who had observed and analyzed so much of man and
-nature, knew now that his own days were numbered. When the first, pale
-sunlight of March shone through the small leaded-glass windows of his
-house, he applied to the king for permission to make out his own will.
-French law demanded that the property of any foreigner dying in France
-went to the Crown. The permission was granted, and on April 23, 1519,
-Guillaume Boureau, the Royal Notary of Amboise was summoned with
-witnesses.
-
-To his half-brothers in Florence Leonardo left his property at Fiesole
-and four hundred ducats. To his faithful friend and companion, Francesco
-de' Melzi, nobleman of Milan, Leonardo willed his notes, drawings, and
-paintings. Battista was given the income that Louis XII had granted
-Leonardo from the tolls of the canal at San Cristoforo near Milan.
-Mathurine was granted the "good black cloth, trimmed with leather" and
-two ducats. Moreover, Leonardo outlined in detail the plans for his own
-funeral, right down to the use of ten pounds of candles.
-
-Too weak now to stand any more, Leonardo was confined to his big
-four-poster bed with the canopy. From it he could see the tracery of the
-Chapel of Saint-Hubert against the pale, foreign sky through the little
-window in the corner. The vicar of the church of Saint-Denis was called,
-with two priests and two Franciscan friars, and Leonardo received the
-last sacraments at his bedside.
-
-An entry in his notes reads, "While I thought I was learning to live, I
-have been learning how to die." But death was not easy for him. With
-tears rolling down his sunken cheeks for "his wasted life," he died on
-May 2, 1519--fighting even this final interruption to all his work.
-
-King Francis I, who was at St. Germain-en-Laye with his court, wept when
-the news was brought to him. Francesco de' Melzi was so overcome with
-grief that he waited until June before writing to the half-brothers of
-Leonardo of the Master's death. He wrote, in part, "He was to me the
-best of fathers, and it is impossible for me to express the grief that
-his death has caused me. Until the day when my body is laid under the
-ground, I shall experience perpetual sorrow, and not without reason, for
-he daily showed me the most devoted and warmest affection."
-
-And in a closing paragraph Francesco added these words: "His loss is a
-grief to everyone, for it is not in the power of nature to reproduce
-another such man."
-
-
-
-
- 14
- _Mankind's Debt to Leonardo_
-
-
-When Leonardo died his notebooks began their separate journeys into
-obscurity. They traveled to different lands and became parts of widely
-disparate collections. It has only been within the last fifty years that
-efforts were made to bring them all together between the covers of one
-volume--a dream that Leonardo himself entertained but never realized. As
-the manuscripts and drawings were brought to light, translated and
-published, the extraordinary scope of Leonardo's scientific explorations
-was revealed.
-
-Mathematician, anatomist, botanist, astronomer and geologist form only
-part of the long list of his accomplishments and give the clue to the
-man who considered all the natural world within his province of study.
-Because of the universality of Leonardo's scientific thought he has been
-frequently mentioned as the forerunner of such men as Galileo Galilei,
-Sir Isaac Newton, James Watt, Francis Bacon and William Harvey. Although
-Leonardo cannot be credited with the actual discoveries that these men
-made, his methods of investigation pointed the way down the paths that
-they would follow.
-
-The key to Leonardo's methods lies in a quotation from his notes on
-vision. He wrote of vision as _saper vedere_--"to know how to see"--and
-he referred to the eye as "the window of the soul." Again and again, he
-stressed the importance of observation and personal experience. Although
-he himself was well read, he emphasized that "science comes by
-observation not by authority." His supreme talent for drawing underlines
-his credo and is inseparable from his science. What he saw in the
-natural world about him needed investigating. The results of these
-investigations were transformed into drawings as the most certain method
-for passing this knowledge along to others. The best example of this
-attitude is represented by his anatomical studies. To merely draw the
-living figure in front of him was not sufficient--it was imperative to
-know what he was drawing. He turned to the dissecting room and after
-intensive study produced some of the finest anatomical drawings in the
-world--and among the easiest for others to understand.
-
-What Walter Pater wrote of the Renaissance--"in many things great rather
-by what it designed or aspired to than by what it actually
-achieved"--could be a summation of Leonardo's own lifetime of effort in
-science. He labored to bring mankind from the morass of medieval
-superstitions onto the firm ground of natural facts. With an insatiable
-curiosity Leonardo attempted the impossible task of encompassing all
-knowledge. Thus he established his right to immortality--for it was an
-attempt that shone like a beacon in a world dark with ignorance.
-
-
-
-
- _Significant Dates in Leonardo's Life_
-
-
- 1452 April 15. Birth of Leonardo.
- 1467 Commences apprenticeship with Verrochio in Florence.
- 1478 Commissioned for altarpiece in the Palace of the
- Signoria.
- 1481 Commissioned to paint an altarpiece for Convent of San
- Donato.
- 1482-83(?) Leonardo leaves Florence for the court of Ludovico
- Sforza in Milan.
- 1483 Begins equestrian monument of Francesco Sforza for
- Ludovico.
- 1484-86 Plague in Milan.
- 1490 April 23. Recommences equestrian monument and starts
- book on light and shade.
- 1496 Meets with Fra Luca Pacioli, professor of mathematics.
- 1498 _The Last Supper_ completed.
- 1499 Apr. Land awarded to Leonardo near Porta Vercellina.
- Oct. French occupy Milan. Dec. Leonardo leaves Milan
- with Pacioli.
- 1500 Leonardo arrives in Mantua. Travels to Venice and
- returns to Florence.
- 1502 In the service of Cesare Borgia.
- 1503 Returns to Florence, commences work on a canal to sea.
- 1504 Begins the painting of battle of Anghiari. Father dies.
- Attempt at flight (?).
- 1506 May. Leaves Florence for Milan at summons of Charles
- d'Amboise, French military governor.
- 1507 Sept. Goes to Florence to settle father's will.
- 1508 July. Returns to Milan.
- 1511 Works with Marc Antonio della Torre on anatomical
- research.
- 1512 French lose Milan.
- 1513 Leonardo leaves Milan for Rome. Serves Giuliano de'
- Medici, brother of Pope Leo X.
- 1516 Leonardo leaves Rome for France to serve King Francis I.
- 1519 May 2. Death of Leonardo.
-
-
-
-
- _Index_
-
-
- A
- Abbaco, Benedetto dell', 5
- Adda river, 124
- "Adoration of the Magi," 29, 30
- Adriatic, the, 62, 93
- "Air conditioner," 69
- Air, study of, 65, 66, 99
- "Alarm clock," 57
- Albert of Saxony, 81
- Alessandria, fortress of, 83
- Alfonso of Calabria, 38
- Alps, the, 37, 67
- Amadeo, Antonio, 58
- Amadori, Albiera di Giovanni, 2
- Amadori, Alessandro, 3, 111
- Amboise, _see_ Chateau d'Amboise
- Amontons, 134
- Anatomy, human, 52, 53, 107, 109, 119, 125-127, 138
- Anchiano, 2
- Anemometer, 65, 66
- Anemoscope, 65
- Anghiari, battle of, 103, 110, 113
- Aquadello, 124
- Aquila, Battista dell', 139
- Arabs, the, 54
- Archimedes, 41, 67, 81, 134
- Architecture, 50, 58
- Argyropoulos, John, 17
- Aristotle, 17, 23, 42, 48, 81, 89
- Arithmetic, 77
- Arithmetico, Benedetto, 16
- Armored vehicle, 39, 40
- Arno river, 25, 31, 96, 100-106, 109
- Arrezzo, 93
- Ascanio, Cardinal, 83
- Astronomy, 80-82, 104, 105
- Atlantic Ocean, 19
- "Automobile," 32, 33
- Autopsies, 107
- Avicenna, 53
-
-
- B
- Bacon, Francis, 160
- Bacon, Roger, 120
- Badia, the, 7
- Battista, 155, 157
- Bayzid II, 94
- Beatis, Antonio de', 151
- Bianca Maria, 64
- Bible, the, 62, 104, 141
- Birds, flight of, 24, 65, 66, 76, 99, 119
- Black Death, _see_ Bubonic plague
- Blois, 152
- Bologna, 144
- Bombard, 26
- Bombs, 39
- Borgia, Cesare, 82, 86-97, 102, 139
- Borgias, the, 102
- Botticelli, Sandro, 33
- Boureau, Guillaume, 156
- Bramante, 68, 131
- Bridge building, 95
- Bubonic plague, 45-47
- Buonarroti, Michelangelo, _see_ Michelangelo
-
-
- C
- "Camera obscura," 55
- Campo Morto, battle of, 38
- Cannon, 26, 33, 41
- Caravaggio, siege of, 124
- Cardano, Girolamo, 113
- Carles, Geffroy, 115, 116
- Carpentry, 135, 136
- Cassano, castle of, 124
- Castel' Sant' Angelo, 130
- Caterina, 2
- Cellini, Benvenuto, 100
- Centrifugal pump, 121, 122
- Cesena, 94
- Chambord, castle of, 152
- Charles d'Amboise, 94, 114-117, 121, 124, 127, 139
- Chateau d'Amboise, 147-156
- Cher river, 152
- Christ, 30, 74, 77, 78
- Church of the Annunciation of the Servite Order of Monks, 90
- Church, the, 18, 48, 53, 63, 104, 145
- Cioni, Andrea di Michele di Francesco de', _see_ Verrochio, Andrea
- del
- City Planning, 44, 45, 47
- City-states, 9, 10
- Civitavecchia, 143, 144
- Cloux, Manoir de, 148, 154, 156
- Coins, minting of, 47
- Collections, 4
- Columbus, Christopher, 19
- Constantinople, 95
- Corte, Bernardino da, 83
- Corte Vecchia, 56
- Coulomb, A. C., 17, 134
- Council of Eighty, 109
- Council of Florence, 23, 106
- Councilors and Tribunal of Venice, 89
- Credi, Lorenzo di, 13
- Cusanus, Cardinal, 42
-
-
- D
- Dams, 101
- Danti, Giovanni Battista, 96, 97
- d'Aragona, Cardinal Luigi, 151
- Darwin, 105
- d'Auvergne, Madelaine, 153
- David, statue of, 106
- _De Ludo Geometrico_, 134
- d'Este, Beatrice, 60, 61, 69, 86
- d'Este, Isabella, 86, 87, 91
- Diocletian, Emperor, 135
- Diseases, 109
- Dissection, 53, 126, 145
- Diver's suit, 89
- Drawing, _see_ Painting
- Drum, mechanical, 61
- Dynamics, 140
-
-
- E
- Earth, the, 104, 105
- Eclipse of the sun, 48
- Einstein, 153
- Equilibrium, 141
- Euclid, 54, 91
- Eye, the, 54, 55
-
-
- F
- Ferdinand, King of Naples, 25, 27
- Ferrara, 70
- Ferrari, Ambrogio, 42
- Fiesole, 111, 113, 156
- Flemish painters, 15
- Flight,
- of arrow, 82, 83
- of birds, 24, 65, 66, 76, 99, 119
- problems of, 70, 71, 75, 76, 96-100, 111-113
- Florence, 7-19, 25-27, 32, 38, 53, 68, 93-96, 100-103
- Flying machine, 70, 71, 75, 76, 112
- Foix, Gaston de, 127
- Forts, 88
- Forum of the Caesars, 134
- Four elements, 48
- France, 67-69, 78, 82-84, 94, 114-120, 125, 127, 128, 139,
- 142-145, 152
- Francis I, 143-145, 148-157
- Fraternity of the Immaculate Conception, 43, 44, 47
- Friction, 140, 141
-
-
- G
- Galen, 52, 53
- Galileo, Galilei, 134, 141, 160
- Genoa, 143
- Geocentric theory, _see_ Ptolemaic theory
- Geography, 18, 19
- Geology, 103, 104
- Geometry, 91, 134
- Georg, 131, 133, 140, 143, 145
- Geotropism, 79
- Germany, 47, 69
- Ghirlandaio, Domenico di Tommaso del, 33
- Giocondo, Francesco del, 98
- Giovanni "the Piper," 100
- Gonzaga, Francesco, 86
- Gothic tradition, 50
- Gravity, 140, 141
- Greeks, the, 69
- Guido, 23
- Guild, 19
-
-
- H
- Hadrian, Emperor, 130
- Harvey, William, 126, 160
- Heavens, observation of, 80
- Heliocentric theory, 48, 81
- Heliotropism, 79
- Highmore, 53
- Hippocrates, 52
- Holy Roman Empire, 9
- Hooke, Robert, 141
- Horse, anatomy of the, 41
- Hydraulic pump, 74, 122, 123
- Hydraulics, 14
- Hydrodynamics, 141
- Hygrometer, 30, 31
-
-
- I
- Imola, 95, 96
- Inclination gauge, 66, 67
- India, 18
- _Introduction to Perspective, or the Function of the Eye_, 58
- Inventions, 25-27, 38-40
- Irradiation, 55
- Irrigation, 101
- Isabella of Aragon, 51
- Isonzo river, 88
- Istanbul, _see_ Constantinople
-
-
- J
- Johannes, 133, 143, 145
- Judas, 74, 77, 78
-
-
- K
- King Charles VIII, 67-69, 78, 82, 120, 148
-
-
- L
- Lake Como, 125
- Lamps, 59
- Lanfredini, Francesca, 2, 7
- "Last Supper," 30, 72, 74, 77, 92, 99, 138
- League of Cambria, 124
- Leghorn, 100
- Leibig, 41
- Leonardo da Vinci,
- and the Church, 18, 48, 104, 145
- birth of, 2
- death of, 157
- early years of, 1-8
- illness of, 142, 150
- moves to Florence, 10
- notebooks of, 25, 29, 140, 152, 159, 160
- Levite, 118
- _Light and Shade_, 54
- Lighting, 59
- Lilienthal, Otto, 100
- Livoli river, 139
- Loches, 92
- Loire river, 147, 149, 152
- Lombardy, 37, 62, 78, 82, 83, 121,148
- Louis XII (of Orleans), 78, 82, 92, 94, 114, 116, 119, 124, 142,
- 157
- Louvre, the, 44
- Lucullus, 130
- Lyons, 152
- Lyre, silver, 34, 35
-
-
- M
- Machiavelli, Niccol, 96, 100, 102, 106, 109
- Machine gun, 27
- Machinery, improvement of, 16
- Madonna Lisa, _see_ Mona Lisa
- Malaria, 139
- Mandeville, Sir John, 103
- Manenti, 88
- Mantua, 84, 86, 87
- Mapmaking, 19, 93, 95, 96, 100, 101
- Martelli, Piero, 118
- Martini, Francesco di Giorgio, 58
- Martino river, 139
- Mathurine, 156, 157
- Maximilian I, 64
- Medici, Giovanni de', 130
- Medici, Giuliano de', 21, 130, 132, 138-146
- Medici, Lorenzo de', 16, 21, 26, 27, 29, 35, 39, 127, 130, 132,
- 146, 153
- Medici, Piero de', 10, 16
- Medicis, the, 10, 21, 23, 26, 27, 33, 34, 68, 130, 131, 140, 142,
- 146
- Melzi, Francesco de', 117, 128, 130, 140, 142, 145, 150, 155, 157,
- 158
- Michelangelo, 106, 107, 113, 131, 137, 144, 145
- Middle Ages, 81, 104
- Migliorotti, Atalante, 35-38, 87
- Milan, 9, 33-48, 60, 64, 68, 78, 82, 83, 85, 95, 114-128, 143, 144
- Milan cathedral, 50
- Military,
- defenses, 88, 89
- machines, 25-27, 33, 38-40
- Millstones, 75
- Mitre valve, 123
- Mirrors, 133
- "Mona Lisa," 99, 103
- Monferrato, 62
- Monte Albano, 1, 2, 5
- Monte Cecero, 113
- Montorfano, 72
- Muscles, 109, 119
- Music, 34, 35
-
-
- N
- Naples, 9, 27, 68, 69
- Needle sharpener, 75
- Netherlands, the, 95
- Newton, Isaac, 24, 56, 123, 141, 160
- Newton's First Law of Motion, 123
- Newton's law of gravitation, 83
- _Notes_, 14
- Novara, battle of, 92
-
-
- O
- Odometer, 69
- Oggionno, Marco d', 58
- Orient, the, 89
- Ornithopter, 111, 112
-
-
- P
- Pacioli, Fra Luca, 76, 77, 80, 84, 86-91, 133
- Padua, 125
- Painting, 4-7, 29-32, 43, 44, 71, 72, 91, 99, 105, 110, 112
- Palatine hill, 135
- Palazzo della Signoria, 12, 21-25, 103
- Palazzo Vecchio, 12
- Parachute, 71
- Paris, 44
- Parma, 138
- Pater, Walter, 161
- Pavia, 51, 58, 125
- Pazzi conspiracy, 21, 23, 25
- Pazzi, Francesco de', 23
- Pera, 95
- "Periscope," the, 89
- Perugia, 96
- Perugino, Pietro, 13, 33, 107
- Pesaro, 93
- Peschiera, 124
- Pharisee, 118
- Philiberta, 142
- Phyllotaxis, 79
- Physics, 17
- Piazzetta, the, 87
- Pincio hill, 130
- Piombino, 93, 139, 154
- Pisa, 25, 100-102, 110
- Pitti Palace, 31
- Plague, _see_ Bubonic plague
- Plants, study of, 79, 80
- Platonic school, 54
- Pliny, 23
- Plutarch, 81
- Pollaiuolo, 53
- Ponte Vecchio, 31
- Pontine marshes, 139, 154
- Pope Alexander VI, 82, 92, 102
- Pope Innocent VIII, 63
- Pope Julius II, 124, 127, 128, 130, 131
- Pope Leo X, 130-132, 139, 142-146, 153
- Pope Sixtus IV, 21, 33
- Porta del Popolo, 129
- Porta Romana, 29
- Porta Vercellina, 79, 115
- Porto Cesanatico, 94
- Portugal, 26
- Predis, Bernardino de, 47
- Predis, Giovanni Ambrogio de, 43, 44, 47, 56
- Ptolemaic theory, 48
- Ptolemy, 23, 54, 103
-
-
- Q
- Queen Claude, 152
-
-
- R
- Raphael, 107, 131, 137
- Ravenna, battle of, 127
- Red Book of the Painters of Florence, 19
- Reflection, law of, 56
- Renaissance, 89, 104, 125, 161
- Riario, Girolamo, 21, 38
- Rimini, 93
- Rome, 9, 33, 47, 69, 128-146
- Romorantin, 150, 152
- Rosate, Ambrogio da, 63
- Rumford, 56
- Rustici, Giovanni, 118
-
-
- S
- "St. Anne with the Virgin and Child," 91, 92
- St. Augustine, 42
- Saint-Denis church, 157
- St. Germain-en-Laye, 157
- Saint-Hubert, chapel of, 153, 157
- St. John, 118, 154
- St. John the Baptist, 151
- St. Luke, 19
- St. Mary of the Virgin, 96
- St. Peter's, church of, 131
- Salai, 86, 115
- Salviati, Francesco, 21
- San Bernardo, chapel of, 23
- San Cristoforo, 157
- San Donato a Scopeto, 29
- San Lorenzo, 144, 145
- San Marco, Little Square of, 87
- Sanseverino, Galeazzo da, 82, 83
- Sant' Onofrio, hospital, 107
- Santa Croce, church of, 107
- Santa Maria delle Grazie, 71, 78
- Santa Maria Novella, 107
- Sanzio, Raffaello, _see_ Raphael
- Savoy, 142
- Scarlione, Bartolommeo degli, 43
- Sculpture, 41, 49, 52-54, 58-64, 118
- Sforza, Duke Gian Galeazzo, 51, 56, 68, 120
- Sforza, Francesco, 41, 47, 49, 61, 64
- Sforza, Francesco (child), 68
- Sforza, Ludovico, 33-47, 51, 52, 56, 57, 60-72, 76-79, 82-84, 92,
- 115, 117, 120, 138, 146, 154
- Sforza monument, 49-59, 61, 64, 120
- Sforzas, the, 40, 56, 57, 71, 79, 83, 117, 120, 154
- Shells, 62, 63
- Signoria, the, 96, 100-106, 110, 114, 116
- Sistine Chapel, 33, 132, 137
- Soderini, Piero, 103, 106, 109, 114-116
- Sologne, 154
- Spain, 18, 69, 127, 139, 142, 143
- Statics, 140
- Steam, 41
- Strabo, 23, 103, 104
- Swiss, 127, 128, 143
-
-
- T
- Ticino gate, 44
- Torre, Marcantonio della, 125, 128
- Toscanelli, Paolo del Pozzo, 18, 19, 42, 93
- Touraine, 92
- Trivulzio, Marshal Gian Giacomo, 120, 121, 125, 128, 143
- Turks, the, 87-90, 94
- Tuscany, 93
- Tyrrhenian coast, 143
-
-
- U
- Uffizi Gallery, 25, 32
- University of Padua, 125
- University of Pavia, 63
- Urbino, 93
-
-
- V
- Valentinois, Duke of, _see_ Borgia, Cesare
- Valois, Marguerite de, 150
- Vatican, the, 47, 130-145
- Venice, 9, 69, 87-89, 124, 125, 127
- Verrochio, Andrea del, 7, 12-19, 23, 118
- Via Ghibellina, 90
- Vigevano, 68, 75
- Vinci, 2, 13
- Vinci, da, Giuliano, 117
- Vinci, da, Piero, 2-7, 10, 12, 90, 106, 117
- "Virgin of the Rocks," 44
- Vitellozzo, 93
- Vitruvius, 77
-
-
- W
- Water, study of, 67, 101, 102, 121, 122
- Watt, James, 160
- Witelo, 58
-
-
- Y
- Yugoslavia, 88
-
- [Illustration: Endpaper, portraits of scientists]
-
- [Illustration: Endpaper, names of scientists]
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Notes
-
-
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- is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
---In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Leonardo da Vinci, Pathfinder of Science, by
-Henry Sampson Gillette
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Leonardo da Vinci, Pathfinder of Science
-
-Author: Henry Sampson Gillette
-
-Release Date: June 2, 2017 [EBook #54827]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LEONARDO DA VINCI, PATHFINDER OF SCIENCE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
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-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div id="cover" class="img">
-<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Leonardo da Vinci: Pathfinder of Science" width="500" height="762" />
-</div>
-<div class="img">
-<img id="insidecov" src="images/icover.jpg" alt="Leonardo da Vinci: Pathfinder of Science" width="500" height="764" />
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig1">
-<img src="images/pg003.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="676" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Portrait of Leonardo da Vinci, after a woodcut published
-in</i> Lives of the Painters, <i>by Vasari. The Latin inscription
-reads</i>
-<br />LIONARDO DA VINCI PITT. E SCVLTOR FIOR.
-<br /><i>Leonardo da Vinci, Painter &amp; Sculptor of Florence.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class="box">
-<p class="center"><i>Immortals of Science</i></p>
-<h1><span class="large">LEONARDO
-<br />DA VINCI</span>
-<br /><i>Pathfinder of Science</i></h1>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/chapter.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="49" />
-</div>
-<p class="center"><span class="larger"><i>Henry S. Gillette</i></span></p>
-<p class="center"><span class="smaller">PICTURES BY THE AUTHOR</span></p>
-<p class="tbcenter"><i>Franklin Watts, Inc., 575&nbsp;Lexington&nbsp;Avenue
-<br />New York 22, New York</i></p>
-</div>
-<p class="tbcenter"><i>To my wife Trudy</i></p>
-<p class="center smaller">FIRST PRINTING</p>
-<p class="center small"><i>Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 62-8426</i>
-<br />Copyright &copy; 1962 by Franklin Watts, Inc.
-<br /><i>Manufactured in the United States of America</i></p>
-<p class="center smaller">DESIGNED BY BERNARD KLEIN</p>
-<h3>AUTHOR&rsquo;S NOTE</h3>
-<p>It is natural that, within the
-confines of these few pages, many facets of Leonardo&rsquo;s
-extraordinary personality will be missing. That he was
-an artist, a man of letters, a poet and a philosopher are
-well known. That he was also a man of humor, as well
-as a prophet whose vision extended far beyond his times,
-are facts that I have also tried to include in this biography.
-There are many gaps in our knowledge of his life,
-and these I have sometimes filled with my own imagination
-to give some continuity to his story. Little is known
-of his early days, his period of travels after leaving
-Milan and his years in Rome. There is, too, a certain
-mystery in his relations to those around him, since our
-descriptions of him derive mostly from his often cryptic,
-personal notes and from biographers who wrote of him
-many years after he had died.</p>
-<p>This book is about Leonardo the scientist, and to fully
-write of his many accomplishments would require an
-encyclopedic mind. My intent has been to extract the
-essence of his story in the hopes that it would arouse
-the enthusiasm of a reader to further his interest in those
-other, more fully documented books&mdash;and, above all,
-in the notebooks that Leonardo himself wrote.</p>
-<p class="jr1">&mdash;H. S. G.</p>
-<p class="jr1"><i>Rome, August 1961</i></p>
-<h2 class="center"><i>Contents</i></h2>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/chapter.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="49" />
-</div>
-<dl class="toc">
-<dt><a href="#c1"><span class="cn">1 </span><i>The Shield</i></a> 1</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c2"><span class="cn">2 </span><i>Florence</i></a> 9</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c3"><span class="cn">3 </span><i>A Studio of His Own</i></a> 20</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c4"><span class="cn">4 </span><i>Years of Frustration</i></a> 28</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c5"><span class="cn">5 </span><i>Milan</i></a> 37</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c6"><span class="cn">6 </span><i>The Monument</i></a> 49</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c7"><span class="cn">7 </span><i>Success</i></a> 60</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c8"><span class="cn">8 </span><i>The French</i></a> 73</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c9"><span class="cn">9 </span><i>Cesare Borgia</i></a> 86</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c10"><span class="cn">10 </span><i>Shattered Hopes</i></a> 98</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c11"><span class="cn">11 </span><i>The Return to Milan</i></a> 114</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c12"><span class="cn">12 </span><i>Rome</i></a> 129</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c13"><span class="cn">13 </span><i>The Last Years</i></a> 147</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c14"><span class="cn">14 </span><i>Mankind&rsquo;s Debt to Leonardo</i></a> 159</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c15"><span class="cn">&nbsp; </span><i>Significant Dates in Leonardo&rsquo;s Life</i></a> 162</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c16"><span class="cn">&nbsp; </span><i>Index</i></a> 164</dt>
-</dl>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_1">1</div>
-<h2 id="c1"><span class="small">1</span>
-<br /><i>The Shield</i></h2>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/chapter.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="49" />
-</div>
-<p>Dusk was beginning to gather in the valley at the foot
-of Monte Albano as young Leonardo turned toward
-home. Stopping by a rushing stream to wash the dust
-of the day&rsquo;s explorations from his face, he laid aside his
-cap and his leather pouch and plunged his hands into the
-cold mountain water. He felt the force of the current
-and watched the whirl and flow of bubbles around his
-bare arms. There was the same feeling, he thought, to
-the flow of air he had experienced blowing around the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_2">2</span>
-rocky crags of the mountains.</p>
-<p>This evening, however, there was no time to sit
-awhile and think. He was in a hurry to get home. Hastily
-scooping the water in his cupped palms, he splashed
-it over his head and face, then shaking the water from
-his hair he rose and picked up his cap. He took a satisfied
-look in his pouch, slung it over his shoulder and
-headed down the stony trail to the village of Vinci.</p>
-<p>Vinci was a small hill town situated on a spur of
-Monte Albano. Its castle and the bell tower above the
-houses seemed like sentinels guarding the slopes of vineyards
-and olive groves spreading down into the valley.</p>
-<p>Leonardo da Vinci, which means &ldquo;Leonardo from
-the town of Vinci,&rdquo; thought about his home. He knew
-that he had been born in Anchiano, near Vinci, on
-April 15 of the year 1452, to a peasant girl named
-Caterina. At the age of five, he had been sent for by his
-natural father, Piero da Vinci, to come and live at his
-family&rsquo;s house in Vinci, a comfortable and roomy place
-with a spacious garden. Piero, five years before, had
-married Albiera di Giovanni Amadori, a girl of sixteen.
-They had had no children of their own, and Leonardo
-was welcomed into the home with affection by his
-young stepmother.</p>
-<p>When Leonardo was about eleven, young Albiera
-died, leaving a darkened and saddened house. Two years
-later his father married another girl by the name of
-Francesca Lanfredini. Although laughter and song soon
-replaced the grief, Leonardo never forgot the love of
-his first stepmother.</p>
-<p>Also in the house lived Antonio, his grandfather, who
-<span class="pb" id="Page_3">3</span>
-was eighty-five, his grandmother, his uncle Allessandro
-Amadori and family, and, best of all, his uncle Francesco.
-The da Vincis, who could trace their beginnings
-in the town back to the thirteenth century, had always
-been respected lawyers and landowners. Because Uncle
-Francesco was neither a lawyer nor a great landowner,
-the people of the town said he did nothing; but he
-tended the family vineyards, and, to the delight of
-Leonardo, he raised his own silkworms.</p>
-<p>As Leonardo entered the main gate, he noticed that
-the oil lamps were being lit above the stalls of the marketplace,
-and the lively confusion of the last hours of
-business was in full swing. People nodded and smiled
-to him, for as a boy of fifteen he was already a striking
-figure. He was tall with long, auburn hair falling to his
-shoulders and his face was so charming that it was frequently
-compared to those of the angels painted in the
-chapels of the church. The music of his lute, the sound
-of his voice, and the gentleness of his person were such
-that all hearts and doors were open to him.</p>
-<p>Tonight, however, Leonardo avoided the usual invitations
-to stop and chat. His father would be back from
-Florence; he had been going there more and more frequently
-as his fame as a lawyer grew. Now Leonardo
-was thinking that he had almost finished the assignment
-his father, half jokingly, had given him many weeks
-ago&mdash;so many weeks ago that he was sure his father
-had forgotten about it. At that time a peasant, whose
-skill in providing fish and game for the table of Piero&rsquo;s
-big household was greatly appreciated, had asked a
-favor of him. This man had a round, wooden shield cut
-from a fig tree and he had asked Piero to have a design
-painted on it for him in Florence. Piero, who had
-noticed the sketches his son was making of plants, rock
-formations, and scenes in his wanderings about the
-countryside, decided to test his son&rsquo;s ability and gave
-the shield to the boy. In the secrecy of his room, into
-which no one was allowed, Leonardo had smoothed
-and prepared the wood, and on it he was painting a
-<span class="pb" id="Page_4">4</span>
-monster.</p>
-<p>Scrambling over rocks, through streams, and into
-caves, Leonardo had been in the habit of gathering all
-manner of creeping and crawling life. Patiently he
-would bring these home in his leather pouch and carefully
-study and draw them. Maggots, bats, butterflies,
-locusts, and snakes added to the confusion of the boy&rsquo;s
-already cluttered room. Everywhere he went he collected
-the things that aroused his curiosity; and as a
-result, his room was always filled with rocks, dried
-plants, flowers, the skeletons of small animals&mdash;and his
-pages of notations and drawings. Now Leonardo had
-combined the features of these small forms of life to
-make a monster&mdash;emerging from a dark grotto and
-breathing fire and smoke&mdash;a thing more terrifying than
-if done from imagination, for each feature was a duplicate
-of a reality in nature.</p>
-<p>Unobserved, Leonardo reached the privacy of his
-<span class="pb" id="Page_5">5</span>
-room and emptied this day&rsquo;s collection on a table beside
-the shield. He lit a candle and examined his catch&mdash;a
-lizard and a large grasshopper. These would complete
-his picture; and, the most extraordinary find of the day&mdash;a
-fossil seashell found high on the slopes of a mountain!
-How did it get there? Was it a result of the flood
-about which his religion had taught him? Had an immense
-wave deposited this ancient sea-life high on the
-Albano mountains? Looking more closely he saw that
-it was a type of sea-snail and in almost perfect preservation.
-This he would have to think about and examine
-later.</p>
-<p>Now, however, the picture must be completed, for
-he hoped to surprise his father in the morning. But just
-then, Leonardo heard the family stirring below and
-his father calling him to dinner. Reluctantly he left his
-table, made himself presentable and went downstairs.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, Leonardo,&rdquo; his father said when he appeared in
-the family dining room. &ldquo;I saw Benedetto dell&rsquo;Abbaco
-on the way in town and he tells me you haven&rsquo;t been
-to school as often as you should&mdash;is that true?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, Papa&mdash;but I&rsquo;m not doing badly.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Signor Benedetto might agree, at least in your
-mathematics. He tells me you ask him questions that
-often make him stop and think. But Leonardo, you
-have other subjects&mdash;Latin, reading, and writing&mdash;as
-well as arithmetic. You mustn&rsquo;t neglect the others, my
-boy. But come&mdash;let us eat.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Together they sat down with the rest of the family&mdash;a
-large, prosperous, and happy gathering. When dinner
-was over Leonardo made hurried excuses to all the
-family, protesting that he was too tired to sing, and
-escaped back into his room. For a long time he worked,
-unaware that the house was growing quieter. Finally
-he laid down his brushes and his maul stick, pushed his
-chair back and smiled a triumphant smile. The shield
-was finished. Tomorrow he would ask his father in to
-look at it.</p>
-<p>Conscious now that everybody had gone to bed,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_6">6</span>
-Leonardo blew out his candle and opened the shutters.
-The night sky was a panoply of stars and only here and
-there was the dark loneliness of the valley relieved by
-pinpoints of light. Leonardo leaned his head against the
-window frame and stared at the blue infinity above him.
-What exactly were the stars? Did all of them move
-around the earth? What was the haze that obscured the
-horizon ever so faintly? What was that sea-snail doing
-in the mountains? Why? How?</p>
-<p>The next morning Leonardo found his father and
-Uncle Francesco in the garden deep in conversation
-about their vineyards and olive groves.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Papa, I have a surprise for you up in my room&mdash;can
-you come now?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, Leonardo. What is it you have found now&mdash;not
-a better way to raise my grapes, I&rsquo;ll wager!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The elder da Vinci put his arm around the boy&rsquo;s
-shoulder and went with him up to the door of his room.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wait here, Papa, until I say to come in.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Leonardo unlocked his door, lifted the cloth from
-the shield standing on the easel and opened the shutter
-just a trifle so that a soft light filled the room.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Papa&mdash;you can come in now.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Piero entered&mdash;he had long forgotten the round piece
-of wood&mdash;and suddenly he froze in the middle of the
-room.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Have mercy on me!&rdquo; he said when he saw the horrible
-fire-breathing creature. In the dimness of the room,
-the monster and the murky cave from which it was
-emerging were terribly real. Piero actually started to
-back out of the room in fright, when Leonardo laid a
-hand on his shoulder.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_7">7</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Papa, this work has served its purpose; take it away,
-then, for it has produced the intended effect.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The shield was the talk of the house; it was set up
-and marveled at. As for Piero, he resolved to take it
-with him to Florence secretly and sell it, giving his peasant
-friend some cheap substitute that he would buy in
-the marketplace.</p>
-<p>So, a few days later, Leonardo&rsquo;s father saddled his
-horse and had the shield wrapped and packed in his
-saddlebag. Also, unknown to his son, he took some of
-the boy&rsquo;s drawings. Piero had now realized that Leonardo
-might have a rare talent. Moreover, he was planning
-to move to Florence with his family so that he
-could be nearer to the Badia, or the law offices of the
-city, for whom he had been frequently employed.
-There, thought Piero, Leonardo&rsquo;s talent could be developed
-under the best of teachers.</p>
-<p>It was many days before Leonardo&rsquo;s father returned;
-when he did, he gathered his family together and it was
-obvious to all that he had exciting news. First, Piero
-announced that he and Francesca would move to Florence
-since he and a law partner were now engaged in
-securing office space from the Badia. It was a handsome
-office centrally located opposite the palace of the <i>Podest&agrave;</i>,
-or chief magistrate.</p>
-<p>Then, turning to Leonardo, he said: &ldquo;I have shown
-some of your drawings to Master Andrea del Verrochio
-and his enthusiasm for your skill has decided me to
-place you in his studio as an apprentice. What do you
-<span class="pb" id="Page_8">8</span>
-think of that?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Leonardo was stunned. Verrochio, the great artist
-and sculptor! Florence! The city-state whose power
-and influence had spread far beyond her own walls.
-Now he would study in earnest; now he would find the
-answers to his never-ending questions. He embraced his
-father and could say nothing.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_9">9</div>
-<h2 id="c2"><span class="small">2</span>
-<br /><i>Florence</i></h2>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/chapter.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="49" />
-</div>
-<p>The Italy of Medieval and Renaissance days was not a
-unified country as it is today. It was, of course, part of
-the Holy Roman Empire, but the main governing forces
-in the land were in the city-states, of which Florence
-was one of the most powerful. A city-state was much
-more than a city&mdash;it was almost a kingdom in itself.
-Each had its own army, and very often there were large-scale
-wars between such city-states as Milan, Naples,
-Rome, Venice&mdash;and of course Florence. The Italians of
-those days considered themselves citizens&mdash;not of Italy
-as a whole&mdash;but of their particular cities; people coming
-from other cities were looked upon as &ldquo;foreigners,&rdquo;
-even though they looked the same, wore the same style
-<span class="pb" id="Page_10">10</span>
-of clothing, and spoke the same language!</p>
-<p>All the power, influence, and ideas of this period in
-history were concentrated within the city-states. A man
-might be a very fine artist, engineer, or philosopher, but
-unless he managed to bring his work to the attention
-of the ruler of one of the cities, he was likely to remain
-in obscurity. Thus it was that Piero da Vinci, knowing
-that his son would have to have a powerful patron if he
-was to succeed at all, brought Leonardo to Florence.</p>
-<p>In 1467, when the da Vinci family entered Florence,
-the city had been under the rule of the Medici family
-for some thirty-three years. As it was in most of these
-city-states, the head of the ruling family&mdash;at this time
-Piero de&rsquo; Medici&mdash;was in charge of the government of
-Florence and the surrounding countryside. But Piero
-was fifty-one years old and ailing, and he had only two
-years of life left at the time of Leonardo&rsquo;s arrival.</p>
-<p class="tb">None of this was in Leonardo&rsquo;s mind as he rode with
-his father through one of the great, guarded gates of the
-city. He was thinking, not of politics, but of the fabulous
-sights that awaited him in this rich center of commerce
-and activity.</p>
-<p>The narrow streets of the city were so crowded that
-is was necessary for the da Vinci family, together with
-their servants and the donkeys laden with household
-effects, to go single file. Leonardo rode behind his father,
-shouting questions, and, at the same time, turning his
-head from side to side so as not to miss a thing. Brought
-up in the solitude of mountains and valleys, and accustomed
-to the quiet life of a village, the boy of fifteen
-was overwhelmed with the excitement of the city.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_11">11</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig2">
-<img src="images/pg012.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="796" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Leonardo rode behind his father, turning his head from
-side to side so as not to miss a thing.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_12">12</div>
-<p>The party was now making its way past the booths
-of hundreds of shops, past magnificent palaces built by
-wealthy merchants, and across squares filled with the
-produce from hundreds of farms. Every now and then,
-Leonardo caught a glimpse of the cathedral dome, one
-of the architectural marvels of its day. He had seen the
-cathedral with its bell tower and also the towering spire
-of the Palazzo della Signoria&mdash;which means the Palace
-of the Lords&mdash;from a hill as they approached the city.
-This palace still stands and today it is called the Palazzo
-Vecchio or Old Palace. But now these sights were lost
-to view in the midst of the narrow streets, other
-churches, flags, and the lines of washing that seemed to
-hang everywhere. Frequently, Piero&rsquo;s party was pressed
-against a wall as a procession shoved its way through
-a street. Sometimes it was by armed horsemen escorting
-a rich banker to some appointment; other times it was
-a file of cowled monks observing some saint&rsquo;s day and
-carrying huge wax candles before them.</p>
-<p>After they had crossed the magnificent square of the
-Signoria, in front of the Palace of the same name, Piero
-leaned down from his horse and asked a blacksmith
-where Verrochio&rsquo;s studio might be. The man shouted
-above the din of clanging hammers:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Everybody knows that shop, Signor&mdash;it&rsquo;s down that
-street and to the right! You can&rsquo;t miss it&mdash;ask anybody!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The man was right, for the workshop of Verrochio
-<span class="pb" id="Page_13">13</span>
-was not hard to find. Verrochio was considered one of
-Florence&rsquo;s finest artists and everybody knew of him.
-He was a short, broad-shouldered man of thirty-two
-with a round face, shrewd eyes, a thin mouth and dark
-curly hair that reached almost to his shoulders. In his
-workshop were two other apprentices&mdash;young Pietro
-Perugino, who was six years older than Leonardo, and
-Lorenzo di Credi, a boy of eight. They all lived in the
-house together and, after Leonardo was shown where
-he would sleep and had put away the few things he had
-brought with him from Vinci, he was taken to the place
-where he would work.</p>
-<p>Verrochio, whose real name was Andrea di Michele
-di Francesco de&rsquo; Cioni, had taken the name of his
-teacher, a renowned goldsmith, as was the custom in
-the shops at that time. Verrochio himself was a skilled
-goldsmith. But to be an artist and to have your own
-workshop in the year 1467 meant being a specialist in
-many things. Into Verrochio&rsquo;s place came a great variety
-of artistic work&mdash;painting pictures, sculpting and
-architecture, goldsmithing, designing and making armor,
-creating decorated furniture, designing mechanical
-toys, and even preparing stage scenery.</p>
-<p>Verrochio, of course, would attend to the greater
-creative tasks, while his apprentices did the chores of
-grinding colors, preparing panels for painting, making
-armatures for his sculpture, hewing to size the marble
-for a statue, preparing molds for casting, building
-models for a new palace or church&mdash;in fact, all the
-countless number of preparations to the finished work.
-Sometimes, if an apprentice showed extraordinary talent,
-he would be allowed to work on the finished painting
-or assist with the final strokes of the chisel. Verrochio
-was a busy man and a successful artisan. To further
-his own ambitions, he was now absorbed in the perfecting
-<span class="pb" id="Page_14">14</span>
-of mathematical perspective and the study of geometry.</p>
-<p>The curious Leonardo had come to the right man. In
-Verrochio&rsquo;s workshop, where so many crafts were
-learned at the same time, his powers of observation were
-able to develop; his hunger to know about mathematics
-was fed. In Verrochio, Leonardo found a teacher who
-would encourage these investigations and urge him to
-study a wide variety of subjects. Leonardo now felt his
-lack of a fuller education. He started to borrow mathematics
-textbooks and to seek out men who could teach
-him what he needed to know. After each day&rsquo;s work
-was over, Leonardo would continue on into the night,
-catching up on his neglected studies and discovering
-for himself new areas of thought such as anatomy,
-movement and weight, botany, and another subject
-which was to occupy much of his later years&mdash;<i>hydraulics</i>,
-or the useful application of water power.</p>
-<p>In these early years, Leonardo commenced his famous
-<i>Notes</i>. He had developed his own &ldquo;secret&rdquo; writing
-in his childhood at Vinci. These notes&mdash;consisting
-of observations, proportions, and reminders to himself&mdash;were
-inscribed on his drawings. They were, however,
-unreadable to the eye&mdash;until held up to a mirror. Leonardo
-was lefthanded and could write fluently in this
-strange manner. It could have been for many reasons
-that he did so&mdash;perhaps from a natural desire for
-secrecy, perhaps for reasons of safety from possible
-enemies. In those days, plots and counterplots of all
-sorts were commonplace&mdash;a rumor or a whisper in the
-right ear could destroy a reputation or financially ruin
-a career.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_15">15</div>
-<p>Leonardo was popular in Florence. He traveled with
-the young men of the town, and his handsome appearance
-and enormous strength (he could bend a horseshoe
-in his hands) made him a welcome figure in many
-houses. He continued to play the lute and the lyre. He
-wrote poetry, composed his own music, and sang with
-a pleasing voice. His blue eyes were kind and his manner
-gentle. He always avoided arguments and competition
-when he could. When he walked through the marketplace
-and came upon the caged birds, he would buy
-them&mdash;just to set them free. Indeed, his love of animals
-had become so great that he no longer ate meat.</p>
-<p>During these years in Verrochio&rsquo;s service, Leonardo
-grew in stature as an artist and rapidly developed into
-a scientist of promise. He amazed his master when he
-painted an angel in an altarpiece that had been assigned
-to Verrochio. He painted it in the new oil colors recently
-acquired from the Flemish painters. So astounded
-was Verrochio with its grace that the master vowed he
-would never lift a brush again if a &ldquo;mere child&rdquo; could
-so surpass him. In this picture there is a tuft of grass
-beside a kneeling figure, also painted by Leonardo,
-which indicates by its careful attention to detail the
-amount of research he did before committing it to canvas.
-In other paintings he made beautiful drawings of
-a lily and studies of animals and crabs, giving a hint of
-what was to come. For, in these preparatory works,
-Leonardo could not be satisfied until he had thoroughly
-studied the characteristics of plants and animals in general.
-Later in life, he was to become more and more
-absorbed in these researches until they occupied the
-greater part of his time.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_16">16</div>
-<p>In 1469, when Leonardo had been in Florence only
-two short years, Piero de&rsquo; Medici died and was succeeded
-by his son, the mighty Lorenzo de&rsquo; Medici&mdash;or
-Lorenzo the Magnificent, as he was often called. Now
-the city of Florence felt itself under the control of a
-man who really knew how to use power. Lorenzo was
-Florence; nothing happened without his making it happen,
-and he became one of the most prominent patrons
-of art and scholarship in all of Italy. If Leonardo was to
-make any headway in Florence, he would have to make
-himself noticed by this new Medici ruler.</p>
-<p>But Leonardo was not yet worrying about how to
-make himself a success. A young man of seventeen and
-still an apprentice of Verrochio, Leonardo continued
-to meet new friends with new ideas. It was at about this
-time that he met Benedetto Aritmetico, a prominent
-scholar and mathematician. It is probable that this man
-drew Leonardo&rsquo;s attention to the practical needs of
-industry and commerce so that some of Leonardo&rsquo;s energy
-was directed toward the study and improvement
-of existing machinery and the invention of labor-saving
-devices. At any rate, during these months Leonardo
-was walking the streets of Florence, wandering into
-shops and mills, making careful observations of all the
-various methods of manufacturing. The more he saw,
-the more he thought to himself that one man could do
-the work of many&mdash;if only he had the proper machine.
-He even made drawings of laborers with picks and
-shovels to see if he could determine by mathematics
-better ways to swing and hold the tools.</p>
-<p>In addition, the particular problems in the engagement
-<span class="pb" id="Page_17">17</span>
-of joints fascinated Leonardo, leading him on to
-the study of more general problems such as the transmission
-of power by gears and the strength of materials.
-He also spent long hours studying geometrical theories
-and reading Greek and Latin classical works. Laboriously,
-he translated these into his own formulas and
-made comments about them in his notebooks. He attended
-the lectures of John Argyropoulos, a Greek,
-who talked of the Aristotelian theories of natural history,
-and who had translated Aristotle&rsquo;s <i>Physics</i>.</p>
-<p>The study of physics opened to Leonardo a whole
-new world of ideas. He experimented with cogwheels,
-and with the improvement of ways to lift weights. He
-became fascinated with the then-known laws of friction
-and built a bench upon which he tested various devices
-for the overcoming of frictional drag; he also tested
-the natural power of one body to set another in motion.
-This bench with its rollers and weights was similar in
-principle to the one used by the French physicist A. C.
-Coulomb almost three centuries later. Leonardo was
-indeed growing into a man of genius. Now everything
-from the stars to the flight of an insect occupied his
-thoughts.</p>
-<p>At the same time, he continued his studies of drawing
-and painting. Frequently he was seen in Florence
-following someone whose face had interested him&mdash;sometimes
-for the better part of the day&mdash;and then at
-night he would fill a page with sketches of this same
-person from memory.</p>
-<p>By developing his powers of observation in this way
-<span class="pb" id="Page_18">18</span>
-Leonardo came to rely more upon his own experiences
-and less upon what he was told or what he read. This
-brought him into frequent conflict with the astrologers,
-the alchemists and even the Church. The astrologers
-were men who told fortunes by the movements of the
-stars. The alchemists, with their knowledge of chemistry,
-pretended to be able to talk with ghosts and to
-tell the future. These men Leonardo held in contempt.
-Although he was a devoutly religious man, Leonardo
-objected to many attitudes of the Church which he considered
-outmoded and which stood in the way of scientific
-progress; because of these objections, he was frequently
-called a pagan.</p>
-<p>In this same year of 1469, Leonardo met the aging
-Paolo del Pozzo Toscanelli. Toscanelli was a famous
-physician, philosopher and mathematician who, just the
-previous year, had marked off on the cathedral floor the
-famous meridian line for determining the dates of the
-various Church holidays. The old man and the boy became
-not only the famous teacher and ardent pupil, but
-close friends.</p>
-<p>One evening at Toscanelli&rsquo;s house, the old man
-showed young Leonardo a globe of the world. Much
-of it was marked &ldquo;unknown,&rdquo; but Toscanelli had filled
-in some areas from his own careful calculations and
-from the stories told him by sailors and travelers. Visions
-of distant lands, remote mountain ranges and vast oceans
-filled Leonardo&rsquo;s imagination as Toscanelli spoke. Then
-Toscanelli tapped the globe to the westward of Spain,
-saying:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Here will be found a quicker route to India than
-the world has ever known before.&rdquo; Then, turning to
-Leonardo he murmured, &ldquo;You will see it happen, my
-boy, in your lifetime.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>One by one, Leonardo&rsquo;s childhood questions were
-<span class="pb" id="Page_19">19</span>
-being answered. Toscanelli told him much about the
-stars, the fossils of creatures long disappeared from the
-world, and how he believed the earth&rsquo;s early formation
-took place. He also taught the boy the art of drawing
-a map. Not only did Toscanelli greatly influence Leonardo,
-but the course of history as well. Ten years after
-Toscanelli had died, Christopher Columbus, struggling
-westward over the Atlantic Ocean, was using a map
-that old Toscanelli had sent him, carefully notated with
-all his accumulated wisdom.</p>
-<p>Leonardo, in keeping with his own philosophy, tested
-all this knowledge with experiments of his own. Because
-astronomical instruments were rare, crude, and
-costly, Leonardo borrowed them where he could and
-later set about making his own. He went on to experiment
-with time measurements, devising the first example
-of the application of a pendulum to regulate a clock; by
-means of two springs, it measured the minutes as well as
-the hours. So for the next three years Leonardo worked
-in Verrochio&rsquo;s studio and continued his studies and experiments.</p>
-<p>In 1472 Leonardo&rsquo;s name was inscribed in the Red
-Book of the Painters of Florence, which was the official
-<i>guild</i>, or artists&rsquo; union of that time. But he was so poor
-that he couldn&rsquo;t afford the dues and hardly had the
-money for the necessary candles to be burnt before St.
-Luke, the patron saint of all painters. Although his
-father now had a spacious apartment in a house on one
-of the main squares of Florence, Leonardo continued to
-live with Verrochio. In fact, he stayed on past his formal
-training period for about four more years, grateful
-to the kindly man for the food and bed he offered.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_20">20</div>
-<h2 id="c3"><span class="small">3</span>
-<br /><i>A Studio of His Own</i></h2>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/chapter.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="49" />
-</div>
-<p>On Sunday, April 26, 1478, the bells of the cathedral
-were ringing loudly over Florence, almost drowning
-out the noise of the crowds in the street. Shutters were
-being thrown open and people were shouting excited
-questions at each other. Distantly at first, but growing in
-volume, was another sound&mdash;an ugly one&mdash;the sound
-of an approaching, angry mob. Leonardo, holding a roll
-of drawings closer under his arm, stopped and listened.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_21">21</div>
-<p>Suddenly the questioning voices stopped. The bells
-continued ringing and now the angry shouts of the mob
-could be heard.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lorenzo is dead! Giuliano is dead! Death to traitors!
-Pazzi! Pazzi!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;On to the Palace of the Signoria! They&rsquo;ve captured
-the Archbishop! He&rsquo;s a prisoner there!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Get a ram and we&rsquo;ll break the door down!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The people in the street were caught up in the surging
-mass. Already soldiers of the Medici were spreading
-out through the city. Cobblestones were ripped
-from the street, and swords, knives, and clubs were
-being brandished in the air.</p>
-<p>Leonardo, backed against a wall of a house, was soon
-left in an almost deserted street. Still holding the drawings,
-he made his way carefully back to his studio.</p>
-<p>As it turned out, Lorenzo was not dead at all.</p>
-<p>It was on this Sunday that the Pazzi conspiracy had
-broken out in Florence. In the cathedral, the ailing
-Giuliano de&rsquo; Medici, brother of Lorenzo, was killed by
-assassins. Lorenzo himself escaped with only a scratched
-arm. The Pazzi family were rival bankers of the Medicis
-and had joined in this plot with Girolamo Riario, a
-relative of Pope Sixtus IV, and Francesco Salviati, a
-long-time enemy of Lorenzo. A hired professional thug
-completed the members of the conspiracy.</p>
-<p>Girolamo Riario hated the Medicis because they refused
-him money for his own ambitions, and the Pope
-opposed Lorenzo because Lorenzo was supporting raids
-against papal territory. As for Archbishop Salviati, he
-had for years nursed a personal hatred for Lorenzo.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_22">22</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig3">
-<img src="images/pg018.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="789" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Leonardo, backed against a wall, was soon left in an almost
-deserted street.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_23">23</div>
-<p>When the assassination attempt failed, the Archbishop
-and Francesco de&rsquo; Pazzi fled to the Palace of the
-Signoria for protection. However, the members of the
-Council of Florence, who were meeting, then became
-suspicious and bolted the doors after them. Both men
-were later killed by the Medici followers and their
-bodies were hung from the barred windows of the
-Palace. In the terror of the days afterward, eighty victims
-lost their lives. The Pazzi conspiracy also had an
-effect on Leonardo&rsquo;s future, as we shall see later on.</p>
-<p>Leonardo had been on his way to the Palace that
-morning. He had been given his first painting assignment,
-or commission, the previous January. This was to
-paint an altarpiece for the chapel of San Bernardo in the
-Palace, and just the month before he had received the
-sum of twenty-five florins as a partial payment.</p>
-<p>Some time before January of 1478, Leonardo had
-left Verrochio and had found a place of his own. The
-commission had come to Leonardo through the influence
-of his father, who was now one of the leading
-notaries, or lawyers, of the city. Though still poor,
-Leonardo could now devote this new independence to
-his widening fields of study.</p>
-<p>Leonardo&rsquo;s studio was like his childhood room in one
-respect&mdash;it was still filled with all the different things
-that had aroused his curiosity. Books were everywhere&mdash;on
-his tables and shelves and piled on the floor&mdash;books
-by Ptolemy, Pliny, and Strabo on geography and
-natural history, by Aristotle on physics, even one by
-Guido, a tenth-century monk, who has been called the
-father of modern music. In addition, there were books
-on arithmetic, agriculture, geometry, grammar, philosophy,
-fables, poetry and even one containing jokes. A
-map of the world hung on the wall, together with his
-drawings; and, scattered throughout the whole studio
-were the plants, fossils, rocks and animal skeletons he
-<span class="pb" id="Page_24">24</span>
-was still collecting from his trips into the country.</p>
-<p>There was also a huge table extending down the middle
-of Leonardo&rsquo;s studio upon which were many drawings
-and instruments for working geometrical problems.
-His easel near the window supported a painting&mdash;a
-study for his commission in the Palazzo. And on his
-desk was a confusion of papers containing notes all
-written in his &ldquo;secret&rdquo; writing.</p>
-<p>At twenty-six Leonardo was deep in the study of
-mechanical law, geometry, and botany. For example, he
-had observed the rings in trees and their relationship to
-the age of the trees. In mechanics, he was absorbed in
-drawing models of a &ldquo;variable speed drive.&rdquo; By meshing
-three cogged wheels of different diameters to a common
-lantern wheel, Leonardo saw that different speeds
-of rotation could be obtained at the same time. This
-same principle is used in the gear shift of modern automobiles.
-About mechanics Leonardo wrote that it was
-&ldquo;the paradise of the mathematical sciences because by
-means of it one comes to the fruit of mathematics.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Now, too, he was starting to write about his observations
-on the flight of birds, the formations of clouds and
-the behavior of smoke in the air. He compared the flying
-of birds to the swimming of fish in the sea, and the
-flow of air to the flow of water. Two hundred years
-before Newton, Leonardo would define the principles
-of aerodynamic reciprocity, as contained in Newton&rsquo;s
-Third Law of Motion.</p>
-<p>At this time, Leonardo had an idea for making the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_25">25</span>
-Arno river navigable all the way from Florence to Pisa
-by the addition of canals, thus giving Florence an outlet
-to the sea. He also had thoughts for the improvement
-of irrigation in order to make use of land that did not
-have enough water. Nothing that Leonardo saw in his
-day&rsquo;s activities was too small to pass unnoticed and unquestioned.
-The flight of a butterfly, the stratification
-of rock in a cliffside, the shape of a mighty cumulus
-cloud, the turning of a carriage wheel on a bumpy road,
-the play of muscles in a farmer&rsquo;s back, the curling of
-water around a rock in a stream&mdash;all of these aroused
-Leonardo&rsquo;s curiosity. Continually, he studied these
-things and painstakingly drew them and wrote about
-them in his notebooks.</p>
-<p class="tb">Unfortunately, Leonardo&rsquo;s painting commission for
-the Palace of the Signoria was never completed. By the
-end of the year 1478, the Pope, angered by the killing
-of the Archbishop during the Pazzi conspiracy, had declared
-war on the Republic of Florence. Ferdinand, the
-King of Naples, was persuaded to help in this war against
-Florence and the Medicis. As the papal forces were
-approaching the fortresses on the Florentine hills, the
-Council of Florence discontinued Leonardo&rsquo;s commission
-in order to conserve money for the defense of the
-city.</p>
-<p>Disappointed though he was, Leonardo did not allow
-<span class="pb" id="Page_26">26</span>
-this setback to discourage him. From a page of drawings
-in the Uffizi Gallery of Florence on which are sketched
-various arms and war materials, we learn that he turned
-from his artistic to his mechanical skills and began designing
-engines of war. Besides being a Florentine concerned
-with the defense of his city, Leonardo was eager
-to gain an appointment with Lorenzo as military engineer
-to make up for the painting commission he had
-just lost. Also, as the fifteenth century was a turning
-point in the methods of waging war, Leonardo was
-attracted to all the mechanical possibilities of the new
-artillery. Before then soldiers had used spears, bows and
-arrows, and stone-throwing catapults, among other primitive
-methods. One of Leonardo&rsquo;s designs included a
-light cannon whose barrel could be raised or lowered to
-proper elevation by means of a hand-cranked screw and
-whose horizontal direction could be determined by a
-maneuverable cradle.</p>
-<p>The military appointment that Leonardo hoped for
-didn&rsquo;t come. Unfortunately for the Medicis, the war
-with the papal forces was being lost. One by one, the
-fortresses under siege surrendered; more and more of
-the Florentine troops were fleeing.</p>
-<p>Leonardo continued the work on his military machines
-for, although he was having some success painting
-Madonnas for private homes and had even received
-a commission from the King of Portugal for a tapestry
-design, he still wanted official recognition for his inventions
-from Lorenzo de&rsquo; Medici.</p>
-<p>During these weeks late in the year of 1479, Leonardo
-conceived many ingenious devices to wage war.
-Besides the small artillery piece, he designed a <i>bombard</i>,
-or rock-throwing cannon, which did not recoil when
-it was fired. This was followed by a light gun arranged
-in three tiers of barrels, mounted so that while one tier
-was fired, the second was being loaded and the third
-was cooling (a forerunner of the modern machine
-gun). Another was a device to repel enemy ladders.
-It consisted of a horizontal beam laid parallel to the
-top of a fortress wall; the beam could be pushed outward
-by one man or several men using a system of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_27">27</span>
-pulleys.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig4">
-<img src="images/pg020.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="344" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Leonardo&rsquo;s design for a machine gun. It had thirty-three
-barrels in three banks of eleven each. While one bank was
-fired, one cooled and the other was reloaded.</i></p>
-</div>
-<p>Unfortunately for Leonardo, just as he was ready to
-show these inventions to Lorenzo de&rsquo; Medici, the last
-fortress outside Florence surrendered and a three-month
-truce followed. Lorenzo himself went to Naples and
-persuaded King Ferdinand to withdraw from the war.
-By 1480, peace returned once again to Florence.</p>
-<p>As for the Medicis, military machines no longer interested
-them. Greatly disappointed at not having his inventions
-used&mdash;or even looked at&mdash;Leonardo began to
-search about for new fields of creative activity.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_28">28</div>
-<h2 id="c4"><span class="small">4</span>
-<br /><i>Years Of Frustration</i></h2>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/chapter.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="49" />
-</div>
-<p>The old monk spread the papers out before him on the
-table.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Master Leonardo,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;these are the terms of
-the commission. We at the monastery wish to have an
-altarpiece painted for our chapel. Your father has recommended
-you, and, as you know, he is our lawyer. Of
-course your reputation has already reached our ears, and
-we are satisfied in our choice.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_29">29</div>
-<p>The year was 1480. The monk represented the monastery
-of San Donato a Scopeto near the Porta Romana,
-just outside Florence. Leonardo shook his head slowly
-at the terms of the commission. The painting had to be
-completed in thirty months at the most. Moreover, he
-must pay for his own colors and even&mdash;Leonardo
-looked up as if to protest but resumed reading&mdash;even
-pay for any gold or gold leaf he might use. Nevertheless,
-it was an opportunity, and Leonardo needed work.
-Since the papal war had ended, he had not received any
-commissions&mdash;and his skill at military engineering was
-still too unknown to have won him recognition.</p>
-<p>Although Lorenzo de&rsquo; Medici was a great supporter
-of the arts and sciences, he had not granted Leonardo
-any of his patronage. In Lorenzo&rsquo;s court were many
-men with much book-learning but little talent. They
-guarded their positions jealously and kept the way to
-Lorenzo barred to any applicant whom they did not
-like. Of them, Leonardo wrote in his notes: &ldquo;They strut
-about puffed up and pompous, decked out and adorned,
-not with their own labors, but by those of others, and
-they will not even allow me my own. And if they
-despise me who am an inventor, how much more blame
-be given to themselves, who are not inventors but trumpeters
-and reciters of the work of others?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In accepting the commission to paint the altarpiece,
-Leonardo hoped to attract attention to himself. Perhaps
-then Lorenzo might welcome him to his court and grant
-him patronage. So, with his usual thoroughness, Leonardo
-set about the task of preparing an Adoration of
-the Magi&mdash;a favorite subject of that time. This was to
-be a picture of the Holy Family surrounded by the
-three wise men from the East, shepherds and animals,
-old and young, rich and poor, paying their adoration to
-<span class="pb" id="Page_30">30</span>
-the Christ child.</p>
-<p>Since he wanted his subjects perfect in every detail,
-Leonardo set about drawing countless youths, old men,
-sheep, oxen, horses, and donkeys. In a separate drawing
-for the background, he worked out with mathematical
-mastery the problems of perspective, that is, drawing
-objects to make them appear three-dimensional and
-either close or far away in space. In addition, he made
-studies for the composition of the whole picture&mdash;studies
-in which his knowledge of geometry was used to
-heighten the excitement of this great religious subject.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig5">
-<img src="images/pg022.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="486" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Leonardo&rsquo;s hygrometer.</i></p>
-</div>
-<p>Among these sketches that Leonardo made for his
-<span class="pb" id="Page_31">31</span>
-&ldquo;Adoration of the Magi&rdquo; is a page on which appears an
-inspiration for one of his greatest masterpieces&mdash;a drawing
-of the &ldquo;Last Supper.&rdquo; And on this same page is another
-drawing&mdash;one of a hygrometer. A hygrometer is
-an instrument for measuring the amount of moisture
-in the air. Leonardo&rsquo;s design consists of a simple, graded
-disk with a balanced pointer, weighted at one end with
-sand and at the other with a sponge or some salt. As the
-sponge or salt absorbed the moisture in the air, the
-added weight was indicated on the graded disk, thus
-measuring the amount of humidity.</p>
-<p>Leonardo&rsquo;s researches for the altar painting took him
-almost a year. Although the monks began to grumble at
-his slowness, Leonardo would not be hurried. He was
-determined to produce a painting that was perfect in
-all respects. To quiet their impatience Leonardo did
-odd jobs for them in the cloister. He repainted their old
-clock and for this extra work they advanced him some
-much-needed money. In March of 1481 Leonardo was
-ready to begin the actual drawing for the altarpiece.
-As he progressed with the composition, the monks
-crowded around with exclamations of delight. So different
-was it from all the other Adoration pictures they
-had ever seen, that the monks sent Leonardo some sacks
-of corn as a token of their appreciation.</p>
-<p>One day, Leonardo was walking slowly toward the
-monastery over the Ponte Vecchio&mdash;the Old Bridge&mdash;across
-the Arno River. He made his way slowly up the
-hill past the construction for the new Pitti Palace. The
-morning was hot and the farmers moving into the city
-with their heavily laden carts were short-tempered.
-Leonardo stood to one side as he watched a pair of oxen
-straining to haul a wagon up a rise in the road. Their
-owner, his shirt unbuttoned to the waist, was shouting
-angrily, lashing the animals with his leather-thonged
-whip. It was a cruel sight and Leonardo turned away.
-From some experiments he had been making, Leonardo
-realized that the poor animals were struggling not only
-with the hill, but the drag of friction on the creaking
-axle. This drag could be eased, he thought to himself,
-by simply resting the axle in two sets of roller-bearings
-attached to the bottom of the cart near each wheel. In
-his mind he formed the plan for such a model as he
-<span class="pb" id="Page_32">32</span>
-made his way to the monastery.</p>
-<p>The drawing of the altarpiece was nearing completion.
-The monks were fascinated by the spectacle of
-the Adoration appearing before their eyes. The soft,
-umber outlines deepened with gray, the ochre highlighting
-the central figures charmed them and they sent another
-gift to Leonardo&rsquo;s house&mdash;a cask of Tuscan red
-wine.</p>
-<p class="tb">As it turned out, Leonardo never finished this altarpiece.
-It is not known why. But the drawing for it can
-be seen today in the Uffizi Gallery in Florence just as
-Leonardo left it.</p>
-<p>It is certain, however, that Leonardo was far from
-idle during this time. He drew the design for eliminating
-the friction of a turning axle by mounting the axle in
-roller-bearings. He experimented with, and solved the
-problem of, transmitting motion to revolving machine
-parts by friction&mdash;the possible forerunner of our modern
-friction clutch. Another device, found in modern
-automobiles&mdash;the differential&mdash;was also drawn by Leonardo.
-This idea provided for the difference in speed
-between the two drive wheels when rounding a curve.</p>
-<p>Leonardo also drew the first known plans for a self-propelled
-<span class="pb" id="Page_33">33</span>
-vehicle&mdash;an &ldquo;automobile.&rdquo; It was designed to
-operate by a system of elastic springs wound by hand
-by the person on the vehicle; the &ldquo;car&rdquo; was then supposed
-to run the short distance allowed it by the unwinding
-of the springs.</p>
-<p>In addition, Leonardo continued designing machines
-for both offensive and defensive military action. One of
-these was a breech-loading cannon, together with the
-first known projectiles that took into consideration better
-penetration through the air and greater stability in
-their trajectory. Indeed, these very much resembled
-present-day aerial bombs, with pointed noses and stabilizing
-fins.</p>
-<p>As the months passed, however, Leonardo began to
-feel that his time and talents were being wasted in Florence.
-Although the monks and friends of the monastery
-were pleased with the work he was doing, other artists
-were being called to greater tasks in Rome. For example,
-Domenico di Tommaso del Ghirlandaio, Sandro Botticelli,
-and even Leonardo&rsquo;s fellow student, Pietro Perugino,
-had left Florence to work in the chapel of Pope
-Sixtus IV in Rome&mdash;known to us as the Sistine Chapel.
-Now, too, it was becoming clear that Lorenzo and his
-court had no time for this solitary genius whose ideas
-stretched beyond his age.</p>
-<p>So Leonardo looked about him. He was thirty years
-old and the walls of Florence seemed to bind his spirit.
-To what city could he go where his talents would be
-put to fruitful use? Rome seemed to hold out no hope,
-for no one had offered him a position there.</p>
-<p>But Leonardo remembered that there had been a visitor
-<span class="pb" id="Page_34">34</span>
-to the Medicis from another city in recent months.
-This man was Ludovico Sforza, the ruling prince of
-Milan, the great city-state of the north. Ludovico, who
-was also called &ldquo;Il Moro&rdquo; (the Moor) because of his
-dark complexion, was seeking the friendship and alliance
-of the Medicis. He was fascinated with the art
-and culture of Florence and sought to gather to his own
-court of Milan as many artists, scientists, philosophers,
-and musicians as he could.</p>
-<p>Perhaps, thought Leonardo, his future lay in Milan.
-So he began collecting his countless drawings, diagrams
-of machines and instruments of war, his notes, his plans
-for canals and irrigation&mdash;even a drawing for a monument
-that he knew Ludovico wanted to erect to his
-father&mdash;and made a package of it to send to Ludovico.
-Then he sat down to write a letter to that nobleman.
-In it he set forth in ten numbered paragraphs his qualifications
-as military and naval engineer, architect, and
-hydraulics expert. Almost as an afterthought to the
-tenth item, he wrote: &ldquo;I can carry out sculpture in
-marble, bronze, or clay, and also I can do in painting
-whatever may be done, as well as any other, be he who
-he may.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When he had finished the letter, Leonardo took out
-a strange instrument. It was a lyre of silver in the shape
-of a horse&rsquo;s head. He had designed it himself, and now
-with an air of peace, he commenced to play. Its rich
-tone was sweet to hear and the music was his own composition.</p>
-<p>Leonardo had also designed other instruments&mdash;lyres,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_35">35</span>
-lutes, viols, and a kind of zither. He had perfected the
-single-stringed monochord of Pythagoras, replacing the
-tablet of wood with thin strips of drum that gave the
-instrument a low or high note according to the tightness
-of the string. In addition, he introduced stops or small
-pistons in the holes of wooden reed instruments; and,
-he had even invented a set of mechanical chords by
-using a wheel of reeds which plucked a set of strings as
-it was turned. His skill as a musician, composer, and
-singer was well known among his friends and his bass
-voice had retained the pureness of his boyhood.</p>
-<p>As it happened, news of Leonardo&rsquo;s silver lyre had
-reached Lorenzo de&rsquo; Medici. All Leonardo&rsquo;s paintings,
-all his designs for cannons and fortifications, all his inventions
-for commercial machinery had failed to interest
-Lorenzo&mdash;yet this single musical oddity excited the
-ruler&rsquo;s curiosity. Leonardo was summoned to the
-Medici palace.</p>
-<p>Lorenzo was enchanted both by the instrument and
-Leonardo&rsquo;s musical talent. When Leonardo had finished
-playing, Lorenzo, surrounded by members of his court,
-applauded and said,</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It would please us if Master Leonardo da Vinci
-would present us with this beautiful instrument so that
-we, in turn, could make a gift of it to His Highness,
-Ludovico Sforza, of Milan.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Leonardo bowed and replied,</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your Grace&rsquo;s request is my pleasure. Moreover, Sire,
-it would further that pleasure to bear the gift myself to
-His Excellency in Milan.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The idea delighted Lorenzo. He immediately directed
-that Leonardo be given a letter to Ludovico and that
-every protection be given Leonardo for his journey.</p>
-<p>Leonardo, with the silver lyre and the letter of recommendation,
-hurried home to make his final preparations.
-He called on a friend and pupil, young Atalante
-Migliorotti, to accompany him.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_36">36</div>
-<p>Toward the end of 1482 or the beginning of 1483,
-with the letter to Ludovico folded in a leather pouch,
-Leonardo and Atalante mounted their horses and left
-Florence for the long journey to Milan.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_37">37</div>
-<h2 id="c5"><span class="small">5</span>
-<br /><i>Milan</i></h2>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/chapter.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="49" />
-</div>
-<p>Milan at this time was one of the greatest and wealthiest
-city-states in all Europe. Its battlements and the
-spires of its mighty cathedral rose impressively from the
-lush plain of Lombardy. Towering over the city in the
-distance were the snow-capped peaks of the Alps.
-Groves of mulberry trees for the production of its famous
-silk industry and vast stretches of rice paddies
-extended far into the surrounding countryside.</p>
-<p>Leonardo and Atalante rode along the embankment
-<span class="pb" id="Page_38">38</span>
-of one of the many canals. The sight of the city hastened
-their pace although the journey had been a long
-one. Frequently on the trip Leonardo had stopped to
-make notes. Riding over the mountains and ravines surrounding
-Florence he had drawn some of the rushing
-streams and the stratifications of exposed cliffs. And
-when they had descended to the plains he observed the
-irrigation ditches and made notes on ways of improving
-the crude systems of dams and waterwheels.</p>
-<p>Leonardo was excited by this new city and by his
-prospects at the court of Ludovico. On the way to his
-lodgings, he also noticed that Milan was a great center
-of arms manufacture. Shop after shop displayed its
-wares of swords, spears, shields, armor for man and
-horse, and signs advertising foundries for the making of
-cannon. Perhaps here he might find an outlet for his
-military inventions.</p>
-<p>In the inn where he and Atalante stayed, Leonardo
-overheard the current political rumors. All around him
-was talk of the war. Girolamo Riario was again in the
-field, and Ludovico&rsquo;s ally, Alfonso of Calabria, had just
-been defeated by the Venetians in a bloody battle at
-Campo Morto.</p>
-<p>Leonardo reread the letter he had written setting
-forth his own accomplishments and decided that now
-was the time to present himself as a military engineer.
-He would minimize the bronze monument, his music,
-and his painting, and instead, he would stress his skills
-in the inventions of war.</p>
-<p>When Leonardo appeared before Ludovico, he was a
-<span class="pb" id="Page_39">39</span>
-handsome young man of thirty-one. Tall and strong, he
-was dressed not according to fashion, but simply&mdash;almost
-severely. His hair hung in curls on his shoulders
-and his auburn mustache and neatly trimmed beard accented
-his ruddy complexion and deep-set blue eyes.
-Indeed, he presented a striking contrast to the nobleman
-seated before him. Il Moro, with his dark skin
-and straight black hair, his richly embroidered doublet
-with its broad sleeves and the heavy gold chains
-across his thick chest, was the exact opposite of Leonardo.</p>
-<p>Ludovico set aside Leonardo&rsquo;s letter, rose from his
-chair, and walked to the heavy table on which Leonardo
-had spread out his drawings.</p>
-<p>Plans for all manner of war machines were there&mdash;those
-that Leonardo had designed for Lorenzo de&rsquo; Medici
-without success, together with many new additions.
-For example, there were plans for a self-propelled bomb
-with flames to be shot out in all directions&mdash;a bomb
-that was later to be called a &ldquo;rotatory rocket&rdquo; when it
-was actually invented in 1846. Leonardo also explained
-to Ludovico his idea for &ldquo;poison gas&rdquo; bombs containing
-sulfur: the fumes of these bombs would &ldquo;produce
-stupor,&rdquo; and they could be used both on land and sea,
-together with masks to protect those who were using
-them. Shrapnel shells, hand grenades, and javelins that
-burst into flame when they struck their objectives&mdash;these
-and many more were among his ideas.</p>
-<p>But perhaps the most unusual to Ludovico&rsquo;s eyes was
-the design for an armored vehicle. It was shaped like
-a giant turtle, with overlapping sheets of reinforced
-wood so that enemy shells would bounce off its surface.
-The armor was pierced by loopholes for the breech-loading
-cannon and there was an opening at the top for
-ventilation. Power for the vehicle was supplied by eight
-men inside turning cranks which in turn were cogged
-to other wheels, setting in motion the four drive wheels.
-This of course was the forerunner of the tank and the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_40">40</span>
-armored car used in modern warfare.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig6">
-<img src="images/pg027.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="287" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Forerunner of the tank or armored car, as conceived by
-Leonardo. Motion was supposed to be supplied by four
-cogged wheels turned by manpower. Sheets of reinforced
-wood were supposed to serve as &ldquo;armor&rdquo; against enemy
-projectiles.</i></p>
-</div>
-<p>In addition, Leonardo laid before Ludovico all manner
-of cannons and designs for tunneling under the enemy&rsquo;s
-defenses. Actually, with respect to warfare itself,
-Leonardo called it a most brutal &ldquo;madness&rdquo;; however,
-he recognized the necessity of being prepared. In his
-notebook, he wrote, &ldquo;When besieged by ambitious
-tyrants I find a means of offense and defense in order to
-preserve the chief gift of nature, which is liberty.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ludovico was very much interested in the things
-Leonardo had showed him. Although he was a man of
-limited imagination and was not able to grasp the scope
-of Leonardo&rsquo;s proposals, he was nevertheless involved
-in a war. Since Ludovico&rsquo;s aging military engineer was
-to be replaced, Leonardo left the forbidding castle of
-the Sforzas with high hopes of getting the position.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_41">41</div>
-<p>In the meantime, he was commissioned to paint the
-portrait of a young girl from a noble family in Milan.
-At the same time, he began the bronze equestrian statue
-of Ludovico&rsquo;s father, Francesco Sforza. For this work,
-he began an intensive study of horses. Since hunting was
-the popular sport at the court of the Sforzas, Ludovico
-owned a stable of the finest Arabian horses, and here
-Leonardo commenced his drawings. Again, his research
-for a work of art led him beyond just making preparatory
-sketches. His studies developed into notes, and his
-notes into a planned book on the anatomy of the horse.</p>
-<p>During these months of waiting for the appointment
-as military engineer, Leonardo furthered his experiments
-with cannon. In the course of these experiments, he came
-across a power that would later revolutionize all industry&mdash;steam.
-He devised&mdash;although he attributed the
-original idea to Archimedes&mdash;a water vessel connected
-to a copper tube which was heated by a fire. The water
-when flowing into the red-hot tube changed into steam
-and the pressure of the steam blew out a ball at the
-mouth of the tube with great force. Leonardo experimented
-with steam in other ways. He built an apparatus
-for measuring the transformation of water into vapor.
-It consisted of a metal box in which was a thin animal
-bladder partly filled with water. Resting on the top of
-the bladder was a flat lid attached by a cord hung from
-two pulleys to a counterweight on the outside. As the
-water was heated, the steam in the bladder pushed up
-the lid. As the lid rose both the volume and the pressure
-could be measured. There were distillation experiments
-with various condensers, one in particular that anticipated
-the modern condenser of Leibig, introducing double
-walls that formed a complete jacket for cooling with
-<span class="pb" id="Page_42">42</span>
-water in continual circulation.</p>
-<p>Not content with having an idle moment, Leonardo
-again turned to searching out books that he had not
-read and trying to fill the gaps in his education. He became
-especially interested in the German philosopher,
-Cardinal Cusanus. Cusanus, like himself, had been influenced
-by Toscanelli and was a man devoted to the
-natural sciences. Leonardo also studied the philosophy of
-Aristotle and the writings of St. Augustine. Throughout
-his life Leonardo believed in an active mind for, as &ldquo;iron
-rusts from disuse, stagnant water loses its purity and in
-cold weather becomes frozen, even so does inaction sap
-the vigor of the mind.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Unfortunately, the post of military engineer went to
-a man named Ambrogio Ferrari. The extent and variety
-of Leonardo&rsquo;s proposals were too great for Ludovico to
-trust. He did not believe that one man could possibly
-bring all those ideas into being. Ferrari, on the other
-hand, was a military engineer only, and a man who was
-content with the customary methods of warfare. Furthermore,
-Ludovico had at last decided that peaceful
-negotiations would gain him more than fighting.
-Thus Leonardo&rsquo;s chance of recognition was again postponed.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile, the money that Leonardo had brought
-with him from Florence was almost gone. He had been
-forced to move from his apartment to a single room and
-now he was barely able to live from day to day. Although
-the court of Ludovico Sforza was one of the
-richest in the world, artists were frequently treated as
-servants; often they were the last to be paid for their
-services. Also, Leonardo was a foreigner in the city,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_43">43</span>
-which meant he was regarded with suspicion.</p>
-<p>Because of these reasons, Leonardo finally decided to
-do what the Milanese artists did&mdash;they banded together
-in groups sharing work and costs. Leonardo had met a
-young artist of twenty-eight, Giovanni Ambrogio de
-Predis, at the court of Ludovico. Ambrogio was court
-painter to the Sforza family and had achieved some success.
-Ambrogio recognized in the handsome stranger
-from Florence, however, the touch of genius, and he realized
-that his own talents would be furthered by learning
-from Leonardo. The two young men decided to
-pool their abilities. Ambrogio offered both lodging and a
-studio; and, in association with his two half-brothers,
-one a woodcarver, another a miniaturist, and his elder
-brother, a minter of coins, they would not lack for commissions.</p>
-<p>Commissions weren&rsquo;t long in coming. On April 25,
-1483, a contract was signed between Bartolommeo degli
-Scarlione, a prior of the Fraternity of the Immaculate
-Conception, and Ambrogio and Leonardo for an altarpiece.
-The fee was two hundred ducats, with a promise
-of more if it were delivered on time and was satisfactory
-to the Fraternity. Delivery date was to be December
-8, 1484. Ambrogio was to paint the altar wings and
-Leonardo the center piece&mdash;a picture of the Blessed
-Virgin and Child.</p>
-<p>But when the painting was finished, it was not according
-<span class="pb" id="Page_44">44</span>
-to the instructions set forth in the contract. Leonardo
-had too independent a mind to be bound by conformity.
-Nor was it completed on time. Indeed, for
-twenty years the quarrel between the Fraternity and
-the painters went on. After ten years, Ludovico was
-asked to intervene for the money owed; after he failed,
-another ten years went by and the King of France himself
-was finally asked to settle the dispute. Leonardo
-wanted his one hundred ducats and the Fraternity offered
-twenty-five. Eventually, a secret agreement was
-arrived at and the painting was restored to Leonardo
-and Ambrogio. Leonardo&rsquo;s painting, the masterpiece entitled
-the &ldquo;Virgin of the Rocks,&rdquo; now hangs in the museum
-of the Louvre in Paris.</p>
-<p>The day this contract was signed, Leonardo walked
-back through the city to Ambrogio&rsquo;s studio near the
-Ticino gate. He was low in spirits from reading the
-petty instructions of the contract, and, in this mood, he
-became aware of the city streets and crowds about him.
-The noise, the confusion, the smells&mdash;yes, the smells
-were the worst. Garbage, filth, and dust were in heaps
-where the last rainwater had left them and they buzzed
-with flies.</p>
-<p>Moreover the houses were jammed together and shopkeepers
-crowded their wares to the edges of the streets,
-leaving just enough room for the occasional horseman
-to get through. Latrines were only for the better houses;
-here, the streets, alleys and even open doorways were
-toilets. People flung their scraps out of the window and
-at night in the poorly lit streets could be heard the
-scurrying of rats. Leonardo stopped, thinking half
-aloud:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Two levels. Streets running one above the other&mdash;one
-<span class="pb" id="Page_45">45</span>
-for pedestrians and one for carts and horses. Yes,
-and cutting through the whole city a system of canals
-to carry the city&rsquo;s waste to a river or to the sea. Why not
-even ten cities of, say, five thousand houses in each&mdash;say,
-no more than thirty thousand people to a city?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Intent now on his thoughts he hurried to his home,
-his mind busy with his visions of new cities.</p>
-<p class="tb">During the years 1484 and 1485 the bubonic plague
-swept Italy&mdash;the same dreaded Black Death so prevalent
-in medieval times. Milan was one of the cities most
-severely stricken. Every courtyard became a hospital
-and the streets were deserted except for the rumbling
-carts picking up the dead. On the roads from the city
-were lines of refugees fleeing to the country. Surrounding
-cities that had not been infected manned their fortress
-walls as in wartime to keep the fleeing populations
-out.</p>
-<p>Ludovico at first tried to protect Milan from the
-spread of the disease; then, frightened, he and his court
-fled. Even the ruler&rsquo;s official documents had to be &ldquo;disinfected&rdquo;
-by perfume and then held for a period of
-time before he would allow them near him.</p>
-<p>Leonardo, sensing opportunity, drew out his plans for
-his new cities. Canals running through them were to be
-used for barges and the underground conduits greatly
-resembled those of modern sewage systems. Paths were
-to have gutters for the adequate drainage of the streets.
-Public toilets were to be installed. Leonardo even had
-plans for the control of smoke collecting over the city&mdash;by
-sending it up tall chimneys where it was picked up
-by fans and driven away over the roofs. The widths of
-the streets were to be in proportion to the heights of the
-houses&mdash;light and air would circulate freely. Two levels
-would be connected by graceful ramps&mdash;the lower level
-for the commercial traffic and the upper level for the
-pedestrians. Where stairs were used they were designed
-so one could ascend or descend without one person
-seeing the other. Stables were devised so that animals
-were fed through openings in their mangers and under
-these were tunnels of flowing water for the removal of
-waste.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_46">46</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig7">
-<img src="images/pg030.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="795" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>The results of the bubonic plague in Italy, 1484-85. Streets
-were deserted except for the carts picking up the dead.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_47">47</div>
-<p>These sweeping plans Leonardo laid before Ludovico
-when the epidemic had subsided. But Ludovico, once
-his fear was overcome, brushed them aside as impossible
-dreams.</p>
-<p>So Leonardo returned to the commission for the Fraternity
-and the designs for the bronze monument of
-Francesco Sforza. These jobs kept Leonardo from
-brooding about his rejections.</p>
-<p>Often, too, Leonardo worked with Bernardino de
-Predis, the elder brother of Ambrogio. Bernardino was
-a minter of coins. As Leonardo watched him at the
-laborious task of first cutting disks from ingots and
-then hammering the design into the hot metal, he suggested
-to Bernardino an easier method, then used in
-Germany. This was to prepare smooth ribbons of metal
-of the desired thickness and with a punch, impress
-the design into the ribbon at the necessary intervals and
-then, punch out the coin. Leonardo went on to improve
-this system by designing precise punches for both faces
-of the coin. A single machine then cut out and stamped
-the coins, using a falling weight raised by little winches.
-This machine was later destined for the Vatican mint in
-Rome.</p>
-<p>On March 26, 1485 an event occurred in Milan that
-<span class="pb" id="Page_48">48</span>
-was viewed with mingled fear, superstition, curiosity
-and excitement. There was a total eclipse of the sun. To
-some, coming as it did so soon after the plague, it was
-a judgment of God; to others, it was regarded as an
-omen&mdash;a sign for astrologers to use for predicting the
-future.</p>
-<p>But to Leonardo the eclipse was a moment of great
-scientific importance. At this time in history, the Ptolemaic,
-or geocentric theory of the universe was the popular
-belief. This theory taught that the earth is fixed and
-the sun and moon revolve around it. Leonardo himself
-had believed this theory for a long time. As he grew
-older, however, he read and heard discussions of the
-heliocentric theory. This theory proposed that the sun
-is fixed and the earth and stars move around it. Now,
-as he watched the eclipse, his doubts of the Ptolemaic
-concept were renewed and he resolved to make experiments
-of his own. The new theory was so daring for his
-times, however, that it would be many years before he
-became convinced of its truth.</p>
-<p>Later that night, deep in thought over the experience
-of the day, he noted down his observations of the eclipse
-and his doubts of the medieval concept of the heavens.
-The Church believed the earth was the fixed center of
-the universe. Scholars and scientists supported the belief
-of Aristotle in the four elements, earth, water, air, and
-fire&mdash;but something was wrong. What were the planets&mdash;what
-was the moon? He picked up his pen and on a
-clean sheet of paper he wrote, &ldquo;Make glasses in order
-to see the moon large.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_49">49</div>
-<h2 id="c6"><span class="small">6</span>
-<br /><i>The Monument</i></h2>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/chapter.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="49" />
-</div>
-<p>During this time, Leonardo had been struggling with
-the design for the bronze equestrian statue. Drawing
-after drawing lay scattered on his studio floor. Lately,
-however, a daring plan for this statue had come to him.
-It was to be a huge bronze warrior, Francesco Sforza,
-mounted on a rearing horse. Weighing perhaps a hundred
-thousand pounds, it was to be cast in sections in
-five furnaces&mdash;a fitting monument to the power of the
-Sforza family. But there still remained a big problem to
-be solved: how could he balance the plunging horse and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_50">50</span>
-man on just the two rear legs of the horse?</p>
-<p>Meanwhile, Leonardo had another problem to work
-on&mdash;a wooden model of the Milan cathedral. He had
-entered his name with the cathedral authorities as a competitor
-in the design and construction of the cathedral&rsquo;s
-dome. Many architects had been brought in and had
-failed, partly because of the antagonism of the Milanese
-workmen to foreign craftsmen, and partly because the
-committee found it difficult to decide what designs it
-liked. Leonardo had sent them a letter outlining his own
-recommendations and had drawn many pages of possible
-plans. He put forward his knowledge of various
-building materials, his understanding of classical architecture,
-and his wish to keep his own ideas in harmony
-with the Gothic tradition of the cathedral itself. Often
-he would make a point of walking about the city, observing
-the different constructions under way and drawing
-up plans to shorten the labor by mechanical means.</p>
-<p>In July of 1487 Leonardo received a payment from
-the cathedral authorities for the wooden model he had
-submitted. Still, however, no final decision had been
-reached. Now, as Leonardo looked at the model in his
-studio, he felt the urge to improve it further&mdash;to make
-it more perfect. Yet he held his impatience in check and
-decided he would wait a little longer. Instead, he decided
-to work on some of his ideas for construction devices.
-He had already made many drawings, but they could
-be improved, he thought, and he began to make calculations.</p>
-<p>Among these notes and drawings was an improvement
-<span class="pb" id="Page_51">51</span>
-on a device for the raising of columns. It was a
-mobile windlass with a transmission gear for transporting
-and erecting columns and obelisks. Another device
-was an earth drill resembling a modern corkscrew with
-double handle bars. The upper bar, when turned, drilled
-the screw into the earth while the lower bar&mdash;when
-turned the opposite way&mdash;carried the dirt up and out.
-Also there was a double crane mounted on a circular
-trolley which carried the dirt of excavation up and then
-the crane was moved around on its trolley so the dirt
-could be unloaded in different directions.</p>
-<p>Other labor-saving devices that Leonardo designed
-were an automatic pile driver, the weight of which was
-raised by a winch and tripped automatically at its height
-to fall on the piling; a lift for raising iron bells to bell
-towers; and a machine for boring tree trunks to make
-pipes for carrying water.</p>
-<p>In the fall of 1488, Leonardo was interrupted by a
-summons from Ludovico, who wanted him to design
-and build the decorations for the forthcoming marriage
-of his nephew, young Duke Gian Galeazzo Sforza, to
-Isabella of Aragon, granddaughter of the King of Naples.
-He worked on this steadily until the wedding
-ceremony in February of the following year. When the
-day arrived, the street from the cathedral to the grim
-castle was trimmed with flags and banners of the two
-royal houses. The inner courtyards of the castle were
-transformed into delicate arbors of laurel boughs. Yet it
-was the evening&rsquo;s reception and entertainment which
-were to be the climax and to them Leonardo had brought
-all his mechanical skill. However, the announcement of
-the death of the bride&rsquo;s mother cut short the celebration
-and, after the bride and groom had left for Pavia, the
-wedding party soon dispersed. Disappointed that his
-decorations had not been fully appreciated, Leonardo
-<span class="pb" id="Page_52">52</span>
-returned to his studio and the problem of the monument.</p>
-<p>He was still struggling with the problem of balancing
-the rearing horse. And, indeed, a solution was soon
-found. By placing a fallen soldier with his arm upraised
-in protection under the forefeet of the horse, Leonardo
-could balance the enormous weight and provide for
-the proper casting of the molten bronze.</p>
-<p>Finally, Leonardo made a small wax model of the
-proposed statue and showed it to Ludovico. The nobleman
-was impressed by its originality. Most of the ideas
-contributed by other sculptors were mere variations of
-what had already been done many times. Also, the other
-plans called for bronze of not more than two thousand
-pounds, while Leonardo envisioned a statue fifty times
-that size! Ludovico awarded the commission to Leonardo.</p>
-<p>Leonardo was to work on this commission for ten
-years and it was destined never to be immortalized in
-bronze, for reasons that will be explained later. His
-energies, as usual, were poured into many schemes.
-Growing out of his work on the monument he planned
-one book on the subject of casting in bronze and another
-on the anatomy of the horse. But the one subject,
-which he began to study in this period and which would
-occupy the remainder of his life, was the study of human
-anatomy. So Leonardo, in the midst of all his other activities,
-wrote in his notes, &ldquo;On the second day of April
-1489 the book entitled <i>Of the Human Figure</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The sources of anatomical study up to Leonardo&rsquo;s
-<span class="pb" id="Page_53">53</span>
-day had been the Greeks&mdash;Hippocrates and Galen&mdash;and
-the Arab&mdash;Avicenna. Books on this subject were
-few, and the anatomical diagrams were crude and inaccurate.
-Galen, for example, had based his studies on the
-dissection of monkeys. Renaissance anatomists had explained
-his errors by pointing out that man had probably
-changed since Galen&rsquo;s time. The Church had stepped
-in during the fourteenth century with an edict that was
-interpreted as a prohibition against dissection of the
-human body. In Italy, however, there were some dissections.
-They could only use, for this purpose, the
-bodies of criminals, slaves, and people of foreign birth.
-In Florence, anatomy was studied by the artists, and
-Leonardo had undoubtedly watched Pollaiuolo at work
-on a corpse that that artist had dissected.</p>
-<p>In 1489 Leonardo, from the results of his own investigation,
-produced drawings of the skull and backbone
-whose careful attention to detail are&mdash;even today&mdash;classics
-in art and anatomy. With infinite patience and
-with a saw of his own invention he had halved a skull
-and drew for the first time with accuracy the curves of
-the frontal and sphenoid bones. He drew the lachrymal
-(tear) canal, and he was the first to show the cavity in
-the superior maxillary bone&mdash;not discovered again until
-1651, by Highmore&mdash;now named &ldquo;the antrum of Highmore.&rdquo;
-He was the first to demonstrate the double curvature
-of the spine and its accompanying vertebrae, the
-inclination of the sacrum, the shape of the rib cage, and
-the true position of the pelvis. He planned a whole series
-of books that would include from head to foot and
-from inside to outside every section of the human apparatus.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile he had been working on the monument,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_54">54</span>
-redesigning it to conform to the practical needs of casting.
-Now it had reached an even grander scale&mdash;a colossus
-that would require two hundred thousand pounds of
-bronze! He recorded in his notes the very day that this
-work was started, &ldquo;On the twenty-third day of April
-1490 I commenced this book and recommenced the
-horse.&rdquo; The &ldquo;horse,&rdquo; of course, was the monument and
-&ldquo;this book&rdquo; referred to still another subject which had
-grown out of his studies of anatomy and perspective.</p>
-<p>The title of the proposed book was to be <i>Light and
-Shade</i>. It would include the subject of optics or the mechanism
-of the eye, the problems of reflection and refraction
-and it would lead him eventually to a re-examination
-of his studies of the sun and moon.</p>
-<p>In Leonardo&rsquo;s day, and even for a long while afterwards,
-the popular belief of vision was one that had
-originally been put forth by the Platonic school and
-expanded by Euclid and Ptolemy. This belief was that
-the eye sent forth rays that brought back the image to
-the soul. Leonardo, in his younger days, had believed
-in the same theory. Not content with what had been
-written on the subject, however, he began to experiment
-for himself.</p>
-<p>These experiments led him to an examination of the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_55">55</span>
-eye itself. He noted the various parts of the eye&mdash;the
-optic foramen or opening, the pigment layer, and the
-iris. These were already known by the Arabs. Leonardo
-discovered, however, the crystalline area of the eye. He
-explained binocular vision, or three-dimensional images,
-by correctly noting the positions of the two eyes in the
-head. He described the variations in the diameter of the
-pupil according to the surrounding light. Further experiments
-with light brought him to the conclusion that
-light and images are received by the eye. He took a
-piece of paper, for example, and pierced it with a small
-hole. With this he looked at the source of light. He
-noted the cone shape of the rays funneling into the tiny
-hole and then when the paper was held next to a white
-wall he noted that the rays spread out again. He established
-that light travels in straight lines. He constructed
-the first &ldquo;camera obscura&rdquo;&mdash;a box with a small hole in
-it. Inside the box an object was placed near the hole and
-behind that a lighted candle. When the box was closed
-the image of the object was cast on the wall. Leonardo
-was already acquainted with lenses, and he placed a magnifying
-lens over the hole to create an enlarged image.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig8">
-<img src="images/pg034.jpg" alt="" width="364" height="321" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Leonardo&rsquo;s &ldquo;camera obscura&rdquo; which he used for projecting
-an image of an object on a wall or screen.</i></p>
-</div>
-<p>He also demonstrated various laws relative to optical
-<span class="pb" id="Page_56">56</span>
-illusion, such as irradiation&mdash;when a metal rod is made
-red-hot at one end, that end seems thicker than the
-other. A brightly lit object seems larger than one exactly
-like it that is dimly lit; a dark object placed against a
-light background seems smaller than it is; a light object
-seems larger than its real size when placed against a dark
-background; and the illusion of a light swung in a circle
-appears as a complete circle of light.</p>
-<p>Many years before Newton, Leonardo described the
-experiment of breaking up a ray of white light into the
-solar spectrum. Also he compared two sources of light
-and measured their intensity by the depth of their shadows
-accompanied by a drawing that was the forerunner
-of Rumford&rsquo;s photometer three centuries later! He
-stated the law of reflection&mdash;that is, that the angle of
-reflection is always equal to the angle of incidence.</p>
-<p class="tb">About this time Leonardo left the studio of Ambrogio
-de Predis and moved into the Sforza Castle. Ludovico
-had put at his disposal a studio in the Corte Vecchia
-and the use of a room in one of the towers&mdash;which
-Leonardo always kept locked. To his growing list of
-work, Leonardo now had to add the preparations for
-the delayed wedding reception of Ludovico&rsquo;s nephew,
-Gian Galeazzo Sforza.</p>
-<p>On a cold winter evening of January 1490 the guests
-assembled again. Silks, satins and gold brocade, diamonds,
-rubies and pearls glittered in the brilliant lights.
-Princes of the Church mingled with ambassadors of foreign
-lands. Music and perfume filled the air and as the
-party quieted down the entertainment began. There
-were dances in gay costumes. Poetry was recited that
-flattered the bride and groom. There were allegorical
-processions. The jokes and antics of the court jester
-made the audience laugh.</p>
-<p>Then, at midnight, the curtain that hung from wall
-<span class="pb" id="Page_57">57</span>
-to wall at the end of the ballroom was raised. Applause
-and cries of delight greeted the spectacle. The rising
-curtain revealed a room in which there was a hemisphere
-surrounded by the signs of the zodiac and the planets.
-While the planets in their niches flickered with concealed
-lights and the signs of the zodiac glowed, lines
-were spoken in honor of the house of Sforza to the accompaniment
-of a choir. The ancient gods swept down
-from the heavens, and the Virtues and Graces moved
-across the scene with nymphs waving lanterns. The
-music drowned out the sound of the mechanism. This
-was the kind of mechanics that Ludovico could understand
-and appreciate.</p>
-<p>The success of this entertainment so pleased Ludovico
-that Leonardo was encouraged to present another
-amusing idea. This one was an &ldquo;alarm clock&rdquo; and it utilized
-what we call today the mechanical relay principle.
-When a small power is suddenly switched over, the
-power is reinforced. The &ldquo;alarm&rdquo; clock worked by placing
-a shallow basin of water at one end of a tubed lever.
-At the other end was another empty basin. Water was
-led drop by drop into the second basin and as this slowly
-filled the increasing weight lowered the lever. The shallow
-basin of water at the first end was suddenly emptied
-and the immediate switch in weight flipped the lever up
-and this in turn pushed up the sleeper&rsquo;s feet.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_58">58</div>
-<p class="tb">Leonardo decided to withdraw from the competition
-for the cathedral dome. Although the cathedral authorities
-were pleased with his design, they could not decide
-to whom the commission should be awarded. In the
-summer of 1490 Ludovico was called upon to settle the
-issue and he decided in favor of Antonio Amadeo from
-Milan. But the work that Leonardo had done so impressed
-Ludovico that he sent him to Pavia in company
-with an architect from Siena, Francesco di Giorgio
-Martini, to inspect the work on the cathedral of that
-city. Leonardo, who had his own workshop and apprentices
-now, took along one of them, Marco d&rsquo;Oggionno,
-a young boy of twenty.</p>
-<p>In Pavia one of the greatest libraries in all of Italy was
-in the ducal palace. Here Leonardo wandered among
-shelves of books and illuminated manuscripts bound in
-rich velvets and gold-embossed leather all bound to their
-places with silver chains. One book that he records in
-his notes was written in the thirteenth century by
-Witelo, a Polish scholar, who wrote extensively on perspective.
-Leonardo, by the necessity of his art, had
-solved many problems in perspective. He had invented
-a pair of proportional compasses, the forerunners of
-those used today for the transfer of a drawing from one
-scale to duplicate the same drawing in a larger scale.
-Leonardo had also designed in very careful detail a parabolic
-compass for drawing a parabola in one continuous
-movement. He now determined to write his own book
-on perspective and, as the subject was so close to his
-studies of the eye, he would entitle it <i>Introduction to
-Perspective, or the Function of the Eye</i>.</p>
-<p>Leonardo submitted a number of plans for the completion
-of the cathedral to the authorities in Pavia and
-then returned to Milan. He worked through the rest of
-the summer on the equestrian statue and at the same time
-he continued to expand his notes on anatomy, light and
-shade, and perspective.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_59">59</div>
-<p>Late on a cold December night in 1490, Leonardo
-lit his lamp. This was a very special lamp that he had
-invented. It had already created a great deal of comment.
-It was so unusual, he had received an order from
-the court for another which he made with a richly carved
-pedestal. Candles, torches, and oil lamps, the only methods
-of artificial illumination in those days, were poor
-substitutes for light. They flickered, smoked, went out,
-and frequently caused damage with their hot drippings.
-As a side result of his experiments in light, Leonardo
-had put a glass cylinder in the middle of a larger glass
-globe. A wick in olive oil was placed in the cylinder and
-the outside globe was then filled with water. The result
-was a bright, steady light magnified by the water in the
-globe.</p>
-<p>He sat down by the small fire and arranged his papers
-in front of him. Then, with a glance at his lamp, he
-picked up his goose-quill pen and wrote, &ldquo;No substance
-can be comprehended without light and shade; light and
-shade are caused by light.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_60">60</div>
-<h2 id="c7"><span class="small">7</span>
-<br /><i>Success</i></h2>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/chapter.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="49" />
-</div>
-<p>It was January of 1491, and a light snow had fallen in
-Milan, edging with white all the roofs, the massive
-spires of the cathedral and the red battlements of the
-Sforza castle. Soon Ludovico was to be married to Beatrice
-d&rsquo;Este of the ducal house of Ferrara.</p>
-<p>Once more the streets of Milan echoed to the carpenters&rsquo;
-hammers. Messengers rode to and from the castle
-and endless carts full of provisions pushed through the
-crowded city. Guests began to arrive from all the allied
-courts of Italy with their bodyguards and servants. The
-rooms of the castle, the palaces of the nobles, and even
-the inns were filling with the royal processions.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_61">61</div>
-<p>Leonardo was again summoned by the court to prepare
-the decorations, the costumes for the masquerades,
-and the arena for the jousting tournaments. An invitation
-had been sent to all the friendly courts to attend
-these contests-at-arms. So, accompanying each new
-party&rsquo;s arrival was a band of armored knights, their
-breast-plates, helmets, and shields glistening in the winter
-sun.</p>
-<p>Leonardo enjoyed designing mechanical toys and entertaining
-the guests with them. One of these was a mechanical
-drum. Ordinarily most of the entertainment
-began with normal drum rolls, but Leonardo&rsquo;s rolls were
-made on a kind of wheelbarrow. On it was mounted an
-enormous drum. When the &ldquo;wheelbarrow&rdquo; was pushed,
-it put into motion a cogged wheel geared to the axle.
-This wheel in turn was geared to two rotary cylinders
-with pegs mounted around the top. The pegs moved
-against five drumsticks on either side of the drum and
-thumped out a rhythm according to the position of the
-pegs.</p>
-<p>Ludovico&rsquo;s marriage to Beatrice d&rsquo;Este, a girl of little
-more than fifteen years, further isolated Leonardo from
-the court. Being almost a child, Beatrice loved parties
-and festivities, and she surrounded herself with people
-who catered to her frivolous whims. As a result so serious
-a man as Leonardo was forced into the background
-of the court life. He was called upon more and more
-to act as stage-designer while his more important work
-went unnoticed. Because these entertainments were easy
-for Leonardo to design, they did give him more time to
-work on his giant equestrian monument of Francesco
-Sforza. Working one day on the scaffolding surrounding
-the clay figure of his statue, Leonardo heard a knock
-<span class="pb" id="Page_62">62</span>
-at his studio door.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Come in,&rdquo; he shouted as he climbed down. &ldquo;The
-door&rsquo;s open.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Three peasants cautiously entered the room and
-quickly took off their caps. One of them was holding a
-carefully wrapped bundle.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Master Leonardo, we have brought you some shells
-we found on a ridge of Monferrato. Remember, you
-asked us to bring anything we found that was unusual?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, Pietro. Thank you. Put them here on the table.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Leonardo opened the bundle. He smiled when he saw
-the shells. He remembered how, as a young boy, he had
-found seashells like these high in the mountains. Leonardo
-questioned Pietro and his companions as to where
-they had been found and under what circumstances. He
-gave them some coins and, when they had gone, he
-looked among his growing collection of notes and drawings
-on the shelves. It took some time for him to find
-what he wanted, for the pages were in such confusion.
-Finally, he sat down at the table with several of the
-sheets and, putting the seashells in front of him, he
-began to make notes.</p>
-<p>The shells were fossil shells but, thought Leonardo,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_63">63</span>
-their presence on the high mountains of Lombardy
-could hardly be attributed to the great flood as described
-in the Bible. In his notes, Leonardo cited the
-case of the cockle which, out of water, is like the snail.
-It makes a furrow in the sand and can travel in this
-furrow about three to four yards a day. By such
-means, he calculated, it could not possibly have reached
-Monferrato from the Adriatic in forty days (which was
-supposed to have been the duration of the flood)&mdash;a
-distance of 250 miles. Nor were these simply dead shells
-deposited by the waves&mdash;for the living creatures are
-recognized by being in pairs, and these in front of him
-had certainly been traveling in pairs. Consequently, they
-could have been left there only when they were alive
-and the mountains were covered by the primeval oceans.
-Moreover, Leonardo also described how living matter in
-prehistoric times fell into the mud and died, and how
-this mud, as the waters receded and years had passed,
-was changed into rock forming a mold about the fossil&mdash;literally
-making a cast of its original living appearance.</p>
-<p>By such deductive reasoning and the testing of the
-evidence before him against the common beliefs, Leonardo
-struggled to free the minds of men from medieval
-superstitions and beliefs. Indeed, these medieval superstitions
-existed everywhere. Astrologers, or men who told
-fortunes by the position of the stars at a given moment;
-and necromancers, those who by tricks of magic claimed
-to be able to talk to departed spirits&mdash;these men profited
-from the ignorant. The Church, with its preaching of
-devils and hells, provided the background against which
-these fakers flourished.</p>
-<p>Ludovico Sforza was himself a believer in such things.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_64">64</span>
-His own physician and astrologer was a man by the
-name of Ambrogio da Rosate, who had such influence
-over the court that he was given a post in the University
-of Pavia, and his fame was so great that he was called
-upon to predict the future of Pope Innocent VIII! Leonardo&rsquo;s
-dislike of these men was intense. He scorned the
-supernatural and asked men to look about them at the
-real world and the real heavens. Observation and experiment&mdash;these
-were Leonardo&rsquo;s key words. But he was a
-lonely figure in his thinking&mdash;like a man awake while
-the rest of the world slept.</p>
-<p>At last the full-size model of the Sforza monument
-was nearing completion. Ludovico had ordered it ready
-for exhibition in the courtyard of the castle for yet another
-marriage festival that was soon to take place. This
-time it was the marriage of his niece Bianca Maria to
-Maximilian I of Germany. Leonardo and his assistants
-were busy with the finishing touches on the monument,
-and with building a wagon on which to carry it from
-the studio to the courtyard.</p>
-<p>During these last months Leonardo had had to struggle
-with all kinds of heavy loads. Already he had improved
-on pulleys by inventing a new kind of tackle,
-and he also had utilized many kinds of levers. One of his
-simpler discoveries for raising heavy weights was a jack
-which, in appearance and principle, was the forerunner
-of our own automobile jack.</p>
-<p>In 1493 when the clay model of the Sforza monument
-was completed, it was put on the cart and wheeled to its
-place of exhibition where a curtain was thrown around
-it. Again Milan was the host to a gathering of noble
-courts, and this time Ludovico outdid himself in the
-display of luxury. Tapestries hung from the buildings
-and rich carpets were laid down the steps of the cathedral.
-Everything that Milan had to show was on exhibition&mdash;even
-a crocodile.</p>
-<p>But the most impressive sight of all was the unveiling
-<span class="pb" id="Page_65">65</span>
-of Leonardo&rsquo;s colossal statue. It rose in majesty against
-the red walls of the castle. The name of Leonardo da
-Vinci was suddenly on everyone&rsquo;s lips. As the word of
-his artistic achievement spread from city to city, messages
-of praise came pouring in. And, for a while the
-years of frustration and failure to gain recognition
-melted away. Leonardo at forty-one had at last achieved
-some success.</p>
-<p>Now there was a breathing spell, and Leonardo returned
-to some of his own projects. For a long time he
-had continued his observations of his two favorite elements&mdash;air
-and water. To him they were related in their
-movements. The birds flying in the currents of air and
-the fish swimming in the flow of water seemed very
-similar to him. He had already designed various instruments
-to tell him about the direction of wind and its
-velocity, and he had also commenced to analyze the
-wing structure of birds and bats. To soar through the
-air like a bird was an ancient dream of man, yet for
-Leonardo it had become a passion. Ceaselessly, he
-sketched the flights of birds, the flutterings of butterflies
-and analyzed their flying patterns.</p>
-<p>But to Leonardo, understanding the <i>dynamics</i>, or
-motion, of air was the most important thing. He built
-an <i>anemoscope</i>, an instrument like a weather-vane for
-telling the direction of the wind; and, he also constructed
-several types of <i>anemometers</i> for measuring the
-velocity or force of the wind. One of these latter consisted
-of a thin rectangle of metal hanging straight
-down in front of an upward-curving wooden arc. This
-arc was marked off in units of measurement. When the
-wind blew, it pushed the thin rectangle up the arc; thus,
-by noting at which gradation it stopped, Leonardo could
-tell the velocity.</p>
-<p>In addition, Leonardo at this time constructed a device
-<span class="pb" id="Page_66">66</span>
-which has been compared to the modern instrument
-used for testing the weight-carrying capacity of
-airplane wings. He fashioned a wing resembling a bird&rsquo;s
-wing and attached it to a lever so that it would be possible
-to lower the wing by pushing rapidly down on the
-lever. This wing in turn was mounted on a plank that
-was in weight equal to that of a human being. He then
-calculated that two wings of this kind would have to be
-about twelve meters wide and twelve meters long to
-raise a man and his machine together. Another device
-resembling those found in airplanes today that Leonardo
-constructed was an inclination gauge. He made this by
-suspending a heavy ball on a cord within a glass bell.
-This ball was then supposed to guide the flyer by telling
-him whether he was flying level, diagonally, up, or
-down.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig9">
-<img src="images/pg040.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="559" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>One of Leonardo&rsquo;s anemometers. The wind blew against
-the strip of metal, pushing it up the curved gauge and
-thereby measuring the force of the wind.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_67">67</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig10">
-<img src="images/pg040a.jpg" alt="" width="431" height="400" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Leonardo&rsquo;s inclination gauge, designed to guide a man in
-flight. The ball in the glass cylinder was supposed to tell
-a &ldquo;flyer&rdquo; whether or not he was flying level or tipped.</i></p>
-</div>
-<p>To Leonardo, water was also a phenomenon that
-from his youth never failed to excite his curiosity. The
-use of water power to run machines, to irrigate fields
-and to carry boats inland was a subject that he never
-ceased investigating. Out of his experiments at this time
-he constructed a device for raising water to high levels.
-It was based on the geometric spiral of Archimedes. He
-took a piece of gut, inflated it, and let it dry. Then,
-covering it with a coat of wax to make it waterproof,
-he wound it around a thin staff in a spiral. He put one
-end in a stream and attached it by gears to a cogged
-water wheel; this set the long screw to turning, and he
-was able to raise water from a low level to any height he
-desired. With a multiple system of these screws he could
-raise water in continuous circulation to the reservoirs on
-the highest towers.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_68">68</div>
-<p class="tb">In the year 1494, King Charles VIII of France
-crossed the Alps at the head of an army of twenty-five
-thousand men. Now Ludovico, by a series of diplomatic
-maneuvers, had allied himself with Charles and had, by
-secret negotiation, actually invited the invasion. By such
-an alliance he hoped to use Charles&rsquo; army to overcome
-the forces of the Pope which stood in the path of Ludovico&rsquo;s
-ambition to become the most powerful ruler in
-Italy. Outwardly Charles was asserting his rights to the
-Kingdom of Naples, but inwardly he dreamt of leading
-a crusade against the infidels in the Holy Land. At the
-same time young Gian Galeazzo Sforza, Duke of Milan,
-was dying. Ludovico desired this title for himself; however,
-until Galeazzo was out of the way, he could not
-have it. There were ugly rumors that young Sforza had
-been poisoned. Moreover, in 1494, the Medicis&mdash;another
-powerful obstacle&mdash;were expelled from Florence, and
-a republic was established.</p>
-<p>Soon young Gian Galeazzo died, leaving a son, Francesco.
-This son was the rightful heir to the Dukedom of
-Milan but Ludovico usurped the boy&rsquo;s claim and declared
-himself Duke of Milan. Now Ludovico was in a
-position to await the impending battle between Charles
-and the Pope.</p>
-<p>With such military and political ambitions in mind,
-Duke Ludovico now assigned Leonardo the task of reviewing
-Milan&rsquo;s defenses. Again Leonardo submitted to
-Ludovico his plans for strengthening fortresses and designs
-for new ones. The great architect Bramante was
-also assigned the task of seeing to the city&rsquo;s defenses,
-and for some time the two brilliant men worked together.</p>
-<p>Then, in the spring of 1494, Leonardo was sent to
-<span class="pb" id="Page_69">69</span>
-Vigevano where Ludovico&rsquo;s young wife was staying.
-This town was also the birthplace of Ludovico, and
-Leonardo was given the job of designing and building a
-small summer house and garden there for Beatrice. In
-addition, Leonardo built a kind of &ldquo;air conditioner&rdquo; for
-her bedroom. It consisted of a large waterwheel that
-cooled the air circulated into her room. Although this
-ancient device had long been known to the Greeks and
-Romans, Leonardo was the one who succeeded in perfecting
-it.</p>
-<p>During this time Leonardo&rsquo;s highly original mind was
-also at work on other devices. One of these was an
-<i>odometer</i>, an instrument for measuring the distance
-traversed by a vehicle. Dials, turned by a system of gears
-attached to the wheel of a wheelbarrow, measured the
-distance traveled as the barrow was pushed along the
-ground. In addition, Leonardo conceived a kind of
-odometer to be used at sea; this consisted essentially of
-a spinner that was towed by a ship which registered its
-speed. Leonardo even invented an automatic spit operated
-by metal vanes mounted in the chimney that revolved
-with the pressure of the hot air rising from the
-fire&mdash;and a pair of large floating shoes for walking on
-water!</p>
-<p>In the meantime, Charles VIII of France had marched
-through Rome and entered Naples. The conquest was
-without opposition. Charles was then crowned King of
-Naples and all Italy was at his feet. Yet his triumph was
-a short one. Ludovico, having used the king to get rid
-of his enemies, now plotted against the king himself. He
-formed an alliance with the Pope, Venice, Spain, and
-the German emperor. Charles, faced with this league,
-hastily beat a retreat to France. Fighting his way to the
-border, he there signed a peace treaty. Thus Ludovico
-had swept Italy clean of all opposition and was now the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_70">70</span>
-most powerful prince in the land.</p>
-<p>Yet Ludovico was quick to realize that his position
-could only be held by force and he set about strengthening
-himself and his allies. To provide for more cannons,
-a hundred and fifty thousand tons of bronze were sent
-to manufacturing works in Ferrara. This, however, included
-the very bronze Leonardo needed for the casting
-of his equestrian statue, and this is why the statue was
-never cast. Years of Leonardo&rsquo;s work now seemed to
-vanish overnight. Ludovico also needed large sums of
-money to secure friends in high places and Leonardo&rsquo;s
-own payments were suddenly dropped. Forced again to
-worry about paying for his daily bread and for his household
-and apprentices, he wrote letters to Ludovico complaining
-of his lack of funds and asking for money that
-was owed him for work done. He looked about for
-other commissions, but none were available. Moreover,
-because he was still court painter to Ludovico, he was
-ordered to paint the decorations of some rooms in the
-castle. But this was more than Leonardo could take&mdash;he
-walked off the job without finishing it.</p>
-<p>Despite all of these misfortunes, Leonardo continued
-struggling with the problems of flight. He kept working
-out the proportions of wing span to the weight of
-the load. Indeed, he had already started designs for a
-flying machine. He had chosen a room which was the
-highest in one of the towers of the castle and which had
-access to a roof. Leonardo&rsquo;s plans for a flying machine
-were a secret, and, with the exception of an assistant, no
-one knew about them. He made sure that he could not
-be seen by the workmen on the dome of the cathedral
-and proceeded to block off his room with beams which
-<span class="pb" id="Page_71">71</span>
-he planned to use as supports for his model.</p>
-<p>He had thought at first that any attempted flight
-should take place over water in order to cushion a possible
-crash&mdash;but as his plans progressed he designed a
-parachute. It was a pyramid-shaped &ldquo;tent of linen&rdquo;
-twenty-four feet broad and twenty-four feet high, and
-it is believed to have been successfully tried out from a
-tower especially constructed for that purpose.</p>
-<p>Since Leonardo was no longer working for Ludovico,
-he lived more simply than ever. He made regular lists
-of his expenses down to the last penny. His habits were
-frugal although he always kept himself neat. His meals
-were spare; he drank a little wine at meals and never ate
-meat. To his pupils and apprentices, he recommended
-regular habits such as not sleeping during midday, eating
-only when hungry and chewing well, exercising
-moderately, and sleeping well covered.</p>
-<p>Yet, even though Leonardo lived cheaply, he was now
-greatly in need of money. Swallowing his pride, he
-wrote to Ludovico, placing himself at the duke&rsquo;s service
-once again. His absence from court, he said, had been
-necessary so that he could earn a living. In this and other
-ways, Leonardo attempted to heal the break between
-them.</p>
-<p>It turned out that Ludovico was glad to have Leonardo
-<span class="pb" id="Page_72">72</span>
-back. Perhaps mindful of the fame that the model
-of the equestrian monument had brought the house of
-Sforza, he now commissioned Leonardo to paint a picture.
-The Dominican monastery of Santa Maria delle
-Grazie was the nearest church to the Sforza castle and
-a favorite retreat of Ludovico. Here he used to walk in
-the quiet garden while the white-robed monks silently
-went about their chores. In gratitude for the peace he
-found there, Ludovico had had the refectory rebuilt
-and on the back wall, a crucifixion scene had been
-painted by Montorfano, a Lombard. But the front wall
-was given to Leonardo. On this Leonardo decided to
-paint a picture of the Last Supper&mdash;the painting that
-has since become one of the best known in the world.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_73">73</div>
-<h2 id="c8"><span class="small">8</span>
-<br /><i>The French</i></h2>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/chapter.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="49" />
-</div>
-<p>The noonday sun was baking the deserted streets of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_74">74</span>
-Milan as Leonardo hurried across the drawbridge of the
-castle. The guard dozing in the entrance arch started
-to his feet, but when he saw who it was he sat down
-again, muttering about a madman. Taking the shortest
-way, Leonardo arrived at the monastery gate and pulled
-on the bellcord. When the gate opened Leonardo
-brushed past the startled monk and made directly for
-the scaffolding in the refectory. He looked at his almost
-completed painting for a moment, took a brush and
-mixed a color swiftly on the large palette. Then he
-climbed the scaffolding and very quickly applied three
-or four strokes. With this he sighed and smiled. Then,
-just as abruptly, he put away his brushes and, without a
-backward glance, he left, making his way back to the
-castle in the hot sun.</p>
-<p>For three years, Leonardo had been working this way
-on the &ldquo;Last Supper.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sometimes he would work from dawn to dusk forgetting
-to eat; other times, he would stay away for days
-and then run back just to add a touch. Once he arrived
-and, with his arms folded across his chest, he stood in
-front of it for two hours just studying what he had done.</p>
-<p>Now, in 1498, the painting was nearing completion
-and the only faces still left blank were those of Christ
-and Judas. Leonardo had drawn hundreds of sketches,
-taking his models wherever he found them&mdash;once he
-sketched a man just for his hands. Now that his name
-had become well known he always had an audience while
-he worked. His pupils, the monks, visiting nobility,
-church officials, and frequently Ludovico himself
-watched him as he painted the &ldquo;Last Supper.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But Leonardo, as usual, was involved in many different
-<span class="pb" id="Page_75">75</span>
-tasks. He was supervising the installation of a hydraulic
-pump over seventy feet high beside a stream
-which would use the power of the stream itself to pump
-water into the castle. Mindful, too, of the uncertainty
-of court patronage, he was designing commercial machinery,
-hoping thereby to secure an income outside the
-court. Among the most notable of these were an olive
-press, an automatic file-cutter, a hydraulic saw, and a
-needle sharpener. This latter was a forerunner of modern
-sharpeners with their mass-production methods.
-With it, Leonardo dreamt of sharpening four hundred
-needles at a time, or forty thousand an hour so that in
-twelve hours one person could sharpen four hundred and
-eighty thousand needles! The needles were arranged successively
-on a moving belt of leather and brought against
-a rotating grindstone. This grindstone was set in such
-a way that the needles were sharpened into curvilinear
-points rather than the usual triangular points.</p>
-<p>In his travels to Vigevano and other parts of the
-countryside around Milan, Leonardo had studied flour
-mills. He had talked with the workmen, asked the prices
-of grain, and noted the time that it took to do the milling.
-Then he made calculations on ways to cut down
-the time, and, in fact, redesigned the entire mill. He
-mounted twelve cylindrical millstones in rows of four
-on one side of a canal and another twelve on the other
-side. In the canal were hydraulic wheels or paddlewheels.
-Each wheel was attached to a rod that ran underneath
-four millstones. Geared to the one rod were four grinding
-levers to the stones above. In this way it was possible
-to have twenty-four millstones operating at the same
-time.</p>
-<p>But most fascinating to Leonardo now was the construction
-<span class="pb" id="Page_76">76</span>
-of his flying machine. His first models involved
-the principle of an air-screw mounted on a platform on
-which a man stood. But where would the necessary
-power come from to lift his machine from the ground?
-At first he thought of operating his air-screw by means
-of a steel spring coiled around a drum, but this he apparently
-abandoned. Later, however, Leonardo did design
-another model on this principle which has been called
-the forerunner of the modern helicopter. It was to be
-operated by four men standing on a platform. Each man
-would hold a bar which wound a spring-driven mechanism,
-much as in a modern clockworks. The air-screw
-was a broad blade spiraling about a vertical shaft&mdash;the
-ancestor of the modern propeller.</p>
-<p>The model that Leonardo wanted to construct now,
-however, was of a different principle. Instead of an air-screw
-he substituted a pair of wings fashioned after those
-of the birds. There was still a platform on which the flyer
-stood and two springs were still the essential &ldquo;motor&rdquo; to
-raise and lower the wings. But as Leonardo worked on
-his apparatus he began to realize that it would be too
-much at the mercy of a sudden gust of wind or a violent
-updraft. It was necessary to return to his study of the
-air and its currents.</p>
-<p>With all of this activity in mechanical devices Leonardo
-had reawakened his interest in mathematics. During
-this time he was introduced to a man at Ludovico&rsquo;s
-court who became his friend and collaborator. He was
-a Franciscan monk named Fra Luca Pacioli who had
-been appointed a professor of mathematics by Ludovico.
-He, too, came from Florence, and in 1496, when he met
-Leonardo, he was forty-six years old and the author of
-<i>Summa di Arithmetica</i>, the first printed scientific work
-of his time. Pacioli was now at work on a book of geometry
-to be entitled <i>De Divina Proportione</i> and he enlisted
-Leonardo&rsquo;s aid in drawing the plates for his book. As
-Leonardo had already made a study of human proportions,
-the association with Pacioli was of benefit to them
-both. Among Leonardo&rsquo;s best known drawings of human
-proportion is a beautifully rendered figure-study of a
-standing man with his arms at his sides and then outstretched,
-his legs together and then apart, inscribed
-within a square and a circle. It was made to illustrate a
-passage from Vitruvius on the proportions of a human
-figure and demonstrated, among other things, &ldquo;the span
-<span class="pb" id="Page_77">77</span>
-of a man&rsquo;s outstretched arms is equal to his height.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Moreover, Leonardo found with Pacioli confirmation
-of many of his own observations and experiments and
-in turn Pacioli gave to Leonardo a confidence in his own
-methods. Pacioli also helped Leonardo with his arithmetic,
-a subject that Leonardo had neglected in his impatience
-to study geometry. The association also helped
-to free him further from the cobwebs of medieval beliefs.
-For Pacioli, the friendship with Leonardo was a revelation.
-Although Pacioli was a learned mathematician,
-Leonardo demonstrated to him that the application of
-his science encompassed <i>all</i> sciences&mdash;even art&mdash;for
-Leonardo later wrote, &ldquo;Let no one read me who is not
-a mathematician....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Legend relates that Leonardo became so absorbed in
-his studies that the prior of the monastery complained to
-Ludovico that the &ldquo;Last Supper,&rdquo; although nearly completed,
-still lacked the faces of Christ and Judas. Ludovico
-summoned Leonardo to court and laid the complaint
-before him. Leonardo, however, was quick to
-reply.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The good prior is an esteemed man, your Grace, but
-he is a monk and not a painter. Little does he know that
-I spend at least two hours a day on my painting.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_78">78</div>
-<p>&ldquo;But Master, he says he never sees you there, so how
-do you explain these two hours a day?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Excellency, the figure of Judas must be of incomparable
-evil. Every day I search for this face in the
-criminal quarter, and every day I fail to find the evil
-that I am looking for. If I cannot find this man, however,
-I can use the head of the prior&mdash;it would do admirably,
-but I have hesitated for fear of hurting his feelings.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ludovico slapped his knees and roared with laughter.
-There were no more complaints.</p>
-<p>Finally, in 1498, the scaffolding was removed from
-the painting and Leonardo&rsquo;s masterpiece was revealed.
-The twelve apostles grouped at the table are shown each
-responding in his own way to the words of Christ,
-&ldquo;One of you shall betray me.&rdquo; Again hundreds flocked
-to see this latest marvel of Leonardo&rsquo;s. Its striking influence
-was felt by generations of painters. Even now, more
-than four hundred and fifty years later, the world still
-comes to stand before the genius of Leonardo da Vinci
-in the refectory of Santa Maria delle Grazie.</p>
-<p class="tb">The clouds of war were gathering again over Italy. In
-April of 1498, Charles VIII of France died and his successor
-was Louis of Orleans, who became Louis XII. The
-new King of France laid claim to the Dukedom of Milan,
-and Ludovico again tried to form an alliance against
-him. But the years of juggling enemy against enemy and
-friend against friend were now coming to an end. No one
-trusted Il Moro any more, and suddenly he realized that
-he was to be alone in this new fight. After nearly twenty
-years of power sustained by powerful alliances, Ludovico
-was forced to turn to his own people of Lombardy.
-Frantically he tried to correct the injustices of years.
-The people had been cruelly taxed to support the extravagances
-of the Sforza court, and, in addition, they had
-been badly treated by petty government officials. Ludovico
-now sought to repay the past miseries of his people
-and to rally them to his support. In such a spirit he
-remembered his court painter, Leonardo da Vinci, and
-gave him a vineyard and considerable piece of land not
-<span class="pb" id="Page_79">79</span>
-far from the Porta Vercellina.</p>
-<p>Now, for the first time in his life, Leonardo knew
-financial security. With the income from the vineyard,
-and in the peace of his estate, he was left free to follow
-his own researches. He took no notice that his &ldquo;peace&rdquo;
-was surrounded by the threat of war. Indeed, he remained
-aloof from politics and court intrigues as much as
-was possible for a man living in the midst of such chaotic
-times.</p>
-<p>Leonardo now had the opportunity to follow up an
-early interest&mdash;the study of plants. He made many
-beautiful drawings; no plant was too small to catch
-his eye. His notes on botany began to grow. With his
-genius for observation and analysis of nature, Leonardo
-made some extraordinary discoveries of botanical laws
-entirely unknown before his time. He wrote of the
-phenomenon of <i>heliotropism</i>, or the movement of plants
-toward or away from the sunlight. In addition, he
-described the phenomenon known as <i>geotropism</i>, or the
-growth of plants according to gravitational law, as for
-example, roots growing downward and shoots growing
-upward. He also defined the laws of phyllotaxis, which
-describe the system or order of leaf arrangement on a
-plant&rsquo;s stem. That is, leaves are arranged spirally around
-a stem so that the third leaf above grows out over the
-third leaf below on one type of plant; or, on another
-type, the two third leaves are over the two third leaves
-below. The same natural laws apply to the branches of
-plants as well; they occur so that every leaf and branch
-can receive sufficient air and light. Amazingly enough,
-these laws, which Leonardo described so completely,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_80">80</span>
-were not rediscovered until almost two centuries later!</p>
-<p>Leonardo went even further in his botanical studies.
-He experimented with gourds, planting them in various
-aqueous solutions; this anticipated modern methods of
-growing plants in chemicals. He also tested the actions
-of arsenic and mercury poisons in plants. He reproduced
-the shape and form of leaves by pressing them on paper
-coated with lampblack, a method that was not used again
-until the nineteenth century. Carefully noted, too, in his
-writings was the rising of sap from the roots to the
-branches by capillary action; this, too, was not rediscovered
-until much later&mdash;in the eighteenth century. Leonardo
-also extracted oils and essences from flowers and
-studied the influences of altitude on the development of
-vegetation. Indeed Leonardo&rsquo;s very approaches to a systematic
-classification of plants were the forerunners of
-modern methods of classifying.</p>
-<p>In the seclusion of his own home, as he continued his
-<span class="pb" id="Page_81">81</span>
-studies of geometry with Pacioli, Leonardo again turned
-to his observations of the heavens. On the roof of his
-house he had set up a small observatory for watching the
-sky at night. Often he looked at the stars through a pinhole
-in a sheet of paper. Leonardo did this to stop the
-&ldquo;twinkling&rdquo; of the stars which he recognized as an
-optical illusion. Moreover, by looking at the stars in this
-manner, he noticed that some were larger than others,
-and imagined to himself how our own earth might look
-from them. Would we not be but another &ldquo;star&rdquo; in a vast
-collection of stars? And if that were true&mdash;how could the
-earth be the center of the universe? By the same imaginary
-reasoning, he speculated on how we must look to
-someone on the moon. Realizing that the moonlight on
-earth faintly illuminates the dark side of the earth, he
-reasoned that then there must be an &ldquo;earthlight&rdquo; doing
-the same on the moon. Thus he was the first to explain
-the dim reflected light on the dark side of the moon.
-Moreover, Leonardo is known to have looked at the
-moon through a convex lens, and perhaps even a form of
-telescope. Indeed, he had built telescopic-type tubes with
-lenses in them and had written directions for their use.
-It seems certain that at about this time Leonardo became
-convinced of the heliocentric theory, the theory that
-states the sun is the center of our universe. On a sheet of
-mathematical notes Leonardo wrote in large letters, &ldquo;the
-sun does not move.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>During this time he continued to seek out books on
-astronomy. Leonardo was familiar with Aristotle&rsquo;s
-<i>Meteorology</i>, Archimedes&rsquo; <i>On the Center of Gravity</i>,
-and with <i>Problems in Aristotle&rsquo;s Books of the Sky and
-the World</i>, a work by Albert of Saxony. This last book
-Leonardo had to read with the help of a Latin dictionary,
-because his Latin was not good. He had already read
-Plutarch, who had defined the moon as a solid. Plutarch
-had written further that the &ldquo;spots&rdquo; on the moon were
-the result of shadows cast by irregularities on its surface.
-This theory, that was apparently abandoned during the
-Middle Ages, supported the conclusions that Leonardo
-had reached by his own observations. But he still struggled
-against a mistaken idea of his own. For a long while
-he maintained that there were seas and waters upon
-the moon which accounted for the sunlight being reflected
-<span class="pb" id="Page_82">82</span>
-so brilliantly.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile, in July of 1499, the French army had
-reached Lombardy. Ludovico was now in a state of desperation.
-He tried to appeal to the people of Milan, explaining
-that their heavy taxes had been due to the constant
-threats from abroad. But, however hard he tried to
-arouse their sense of loyalty to him, the public of Milan
-turned a deaf ear. They had not forgotten how Ludovico
-had allied himself with Charles VIII&mdash;a foreign king!
-Ludovico now had to put his trust in his army commander,
-Galeazzo da Sanseverino, despite warnings that
-this was a man of doubtful loyalty. Moreover, to make
-matters worse, Louis XII had succeeded in forming an
-alliance against Ludovico; and, among his allies was a
-powerful cardinal, son of Pope Alexander VI&mdash;the notorious
-Cesare Borgia.</p>
-<p>From a note on a page of designs for supplying and
-heating a bath we know that Leonardo continued his
-quiet life, only vaguely disturbed by the political upheaval
-taking place around him. His note reads, &ldquo;On the
-first day of August 1499 I wrote here of movement and
-weight.&rdquo; He had made many experiments and calculations
-concerning the movement and weight of objects.
-He had drawn, for example, the flight of an arrow to
-describe motion through air and although he wrote no
-specific formula, he marked the three stages of its trajectory&mdash;the
-initial push, the slowing and the steeper
-downward path as the arrow&rsquo;s momentum was overcome
-by the resistance of the air. He also defined the law of
-movement on an inclined plane and he arrived at the
-root principle of Newton&rsquo;s law of gravitation when he
-wrote, &ldquo;every weight tends to fall toward the center by
-<span class="pb" id="Page_83">83</span>
-the shortest way.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A diagram of this period is probably the first scientific
-graph. Leonardo had experimented with two balls
-dropped from a height. First he dropped them together
-and then one after the other. In attempting to solve the
-mathematical problems presented by these falling bodies
-he drew a graph of vertical and horizontal lines. The
-times it took for the balls to fall were marked on the
-horizontal lines and the distances on the vertical lines&mdash;thus,
-he could trace their relationship.</p>
-<p>But this peaceful time of productive work was running
-out for Leonardo. Ludovico&rsquo;s commander, Galeazzo,
-had yielded the fortress of Alessandria to the
-French at the first battle. Ludovico himself had sent his
-sons and his treasure to his brother, Cardinal Ascanio,
-in Germany. When he saw that his cause was lost, he
-turned the Sforza castle over to Bernardino da Corte, a
-trusted commander, making certain that it was fully
-supplied with arms and food. Then in sorrow, Ludovico
-Sforza, Duke of Milan, left his city for the last time as
-ruler of Lombardy. The gates of Milan were opened to
-the French in October of 1499, and Bernardino da
-Corte surrendered the Sforza castle.</p>
-<p>French soldiers now occupied Milan as conquerors
-<span class="pb" id="Page_84">84</span>
-and the people of the city were in a state of confusion.
-Those who could made their peace with the French; but
-others, who had been supporters of Ludovico, fled to
-avoid arrest. Leonardo, who would be suspect to the
-French, packed up his few possessions&mdash;although he did
-manage to retain his estate&mdash;and left, together with
-Pacioli and an apprentice, for Mantua.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_85">85</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig11">
-<img src="images/pg049.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="794" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Leonardo had to flee Milan.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_86">86</div>
-<h2 id="c9"><span class="small">9</span>
-<br /><i>Cesare Borgia</i></h2>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/chapter.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="49" />
-</div>
-<p>Leonardo, Pacioli, and Salai, the apprentice, arrived in
-Mantua in February of the year 1500. They were given
-refuge in the castle of Isabella d&rsquo;Este, who was the sister
-of Beatrice, and the wife of Francesco Gonzaga, governor
-of Mantua. Isabella was one of the eminent women
-of her time and attracted to her court the intellectual
-life of Italy. In Leonardo she recognized the man of
-genius; indeed, she treated him as an equal, putting her
-castle at his disposal. She persuaded him to paint her
-<span class="pb" id="Page_87">87</span>
-portrait and Leonardo commenced a preparatory drawing.</p>
-<p>In the evenings at the castle there were discussions and
-music and here Leonardo again met his pupil and companion
-on the trip from Florence so many years ago&mdash;Atalante
-Migliorotti who had left Milan in 1490 to
-assume the post of court musician to Isabella.</p>
-<p>Although Leonardo had found a haven of peace in the
-political storm that raged about the city state of Mantua,
-he and Pacioli took to the road again for reasons unknown.
-Isabella d&rsquo;Este, who still wanted Leonardo at
-her court, sent many a letter and messenger in the following
-years to bring Leonardo back&mdash;first to finish the
-portrait and then, when that failed, to sell to her any
-picture that Leonardo wished to send. Strangely enough,
-however, Leonardo seems to have turned his back upon
-the one sympathetic person he had met in a world of
-indifference.</p>
-<p class="tb">The first, warm breezes of spring were blowing over
-the lagoons of Venice when Leonardo and Pacioli
-stepped ashore on the Piazzetta, or Little Square of San
-Marco. But the beauty of this jewel-like city rising from
-the sea was momentarily ignored by the two travelers
-for an angry, frightened crowd had gathered about the
-Doge&rsquo;s palace on the Piazzetta.</p>
-<p>The people of Venice were fearful because their fleet
-<span class="pb" id="Page_88">88</span>
-had just suffered a crushing defeat by the Turks. This
-meant that their power at sea, once supreme, was now no
-more. Year by year, moreover, their possessions in the
-east had been slowly whittled away, and now the city
-itself was threatened by invasion. At this same time, the
-Venetian ambassador, Manenti, hoping to make peace
-with the Turks, had been rudely rejected by them. Panic
-soon swept the city and rumors of the bloodthirsty infidel
-passed from person to person like the rush of an
-ugly wind. Barricades were put up and windows were
-barred. In this charged atmosphere, Leonardo and
-Pacioli sought out their lodgings.</p>
-<p>Soon after Leonardo&rsquo;s arrival here&mdash;either because
-his reputation had preceded him or, more likely, because
-of Fra Luca Pacioli&rsquo;s recommendations&mdash;he became
-directly involved with the defenses of Venice. Immediately
-he was sent on an inspection trip of the city&rsquo;s
-existing defenses, especially those inland from where an
-invasion would probably come. When he had seen
-them, he recommended a system of defenses along the
-Isonzo river near the present border of Yugoslavia, using
-the river itself to the disadvantage of the enemy. He
-also made suggestions for the improvement of forts, and
-even drew up plans for a completely new type&mdash;a circular
-fort. This consisted of a central, circular fort surrounded
-by two belts of fortresses each separated by a
-moat. In the outside moat were four semicircular outposts.
-Communication was by underground galleries.
-The total absence of superstructure and projecting balconies
-was a new idea for the times. Another new defense
-idea was to station in the moat itself a low, thick
-tower almost completely submerged, defended by a thin
-opening near the waterline. It was reached from the
-main fort by an underground passage and the gunsmoke
-was removed by vents. According to Leonardo no enemy
-could conceal himself in any part of the defenses
-and not be seen from such an outpost.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_89">89</div>
-<p>Leonardo&rsquo;s most unusual scheme for defending Venice,
-however, was his idea of approaching an enemy
-fleet under the water and then putting holes in the hulls
-of their ships. Actually, the idea of diving was not a
-new one. Aristotle had written of diving and diving
-bells, and certainly the stories of pearl fishers in the
-Orient were well known in the Renaissance. But Leonardo
-designed a diver&rsquo;s suit closely resembling those
-used today. This consisted of a complete suit of leather
-with helmet and eyepieces; it was made airtight by
-spirals of steel at the joints. He then added a bladder for
-holding air which fastened inside the suit at the diver&rsquo;s
-chest. It is possible that Leonardo also invented an air
-chamber that could be used by the diver while under
-water&mdash;but he was very secretive about this invention
-for fear of how men might abuse such a discovery. He
-wrote, &ldquo;... and this I do not publish or divulge, on
-account of the evil nature of man, who would practice
-assassinations at the bottom of the seas....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Leonardo felt the same way about a &ldquo;submarine&rdquo; that
-he presented to the Councilors and Tribunal of Venice.
-This resembled a turtle&rsquo;s shell with a raised bump on the
-center which was the &ldquo;periscope.&rdquo; When submerged
-the water probably rose to an area just around the
-&ldquo;periscope,&rdquo; but, again, the information about its air-supply
-is missing and the only reference to it is a reminder
-to close the &ldquo;l&mdash;.&rdquo; In addition, he invented a
-system of screws mounted in tongs with the borer in
-the middle for putting holes in the bottoms of enemy
-ships, and at the same time he thought of a defense
-against such an attack by designing the defending vessels
-with double hulls.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_90">90</div>
-<p>Among Leonardo&rsquo;s other maritime devices were designs
-for boats that could dredge canals, harbors, and
-lagoons. What was the result of all these plans? We do
-not know. Whether any one of them was used against
-the Turks is a mystery.</p>
-<p>At any rate, Leonardo and Pacioli left Venice that
-same spring and arrived in Florence in April of 1500.
-One of the purposes of Leonardo&rsquo;s journey was to visit
-his father who was now living on Via Ghibellina with
-his fourth wife. Leonardo was now forty-eight. Still
-tall and straight with the strength of his youth, his face
-prematurely aged and his hair thinning back from his
-high forehead, Leonardo was more than ever an outstanding
-looking man. He still scorned fashionable
-clothes and dressed according to his own comfort which
-made him even more noticeable among the crowd. His
-deep-set eyes with their direct and penetrating glance,
-framed by his full, reddish beard, never missed a thing,
-although he now wore spectacles at his work.</p>
-<p>Now that he was back in Florence, Leonardo needed
-lodgings and a job. He had banked his small savings,
-and he did not want to touch that. His father&rsquo;s house
-with the five children of his present wife plus the sons
-from his previous marriages was too full to accommodate
-Leonardo. Moreover, the relationship between
-Piero and Leonardo was polite but distant, as Piero
-preferred the children of his later marriages.</p>
-<p>Luckily, the place to live and the commission Leonardo
-<span class="pb" id="Page_91">91</span>
-needed presented themselves at the same time.
-The Church of the Annunciation of the Servite Order
-of Monks needed an altarpiece, and, as Leonardo&rsquo;s fame
-was great, they offered him and his apprentice quarters
-in the monastery. Here, in the solitude of a monastic
-cell, Leonardo was able to return to his own researches.
-His long association with Fra Luca Pacioli continued as
-they worked together on Pacioli&rsquo;s edition of Euclid&rsquo;s
-<i>Elements</i>. At the same time, with his absorption in
-geometry, Leonardo commenced his studies of the transformation
-of solids; that is, changing the shape of something
-to another shape without diminishing or increasing
-its substance.</p>
-<p>In his preoccupation with geometry, Leonardo had
-apparently done little about the commission which the
-Servite monks had given him. He finally yielded to their
-complaints, however, and commenced to draw the preliminary
-study for the subject, which was &ldquo;St. Anne
-with the Virgin and Child.&rdquo; Again his knowledge of
-geometry is most apparent in the finely constructed
-composition, every gesture of which is as plotted as a
-geometric exercise. In April of 1501, the drawing was
-finished; it caused an immediate sensation throughout
-Florence. For two days the public was allowed to pass
-in front of it.</p>
-<p>But now a change was taking place in Leonardo. He
-was no longer content with simply painting. His highly
-original researches for pictures had slowly grown to the
-point where the research was more important than
-painting. In a sense the scientist had taken the brush
-from the artist. In two letters from Isabella d&rsquo;Este&rsquo;s
-emissary in Florence we learn, &ldquo;He is entirely wrapped
-up in geometry and has no patience for painting.&rdquo; This
-excerpt from a letter dated April 8, 1501, was followed
-six days later by another which said in part, &ldquo;In brief,
-his mathematical experiments have made painting so distasteful
-to him that he cannot even bear to take up a
-<span class="pb" id="Page_92">92</span>
-brush.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="tb">A few months after the completion of the St. Anne
-drawing, Leonardo received a letter signed by Cesare
-Borgia, Duke of Valentinois. Leonardo frowned and
-thought back to his last days in Milan. When King
-Louis XII of France had entered the city, he had summoned
-the painter of the &ldquo;Last Supper&rdquo; to an audience.
-The king had been generous in his praise and had tried
-to persuade Leonardo to remain. At that same audience
-had also been Cesare Borgia, an ally of the French. Leonardo
-remembered the man now&mdash;the dark hair and
-eyes, the black, arched eyebrows, and the face marked
-by some old disease. He was a powerful-chested, thin-hipped
-man who had originally been made a cardinal by
-his father, Pope Alexander VI. But the attractions of
-secular power soon persuaded him to abandon this title.
-With the enthusiastic help of his father, Borgia had
-fought, murdered, and deceived his way to a formidable
-position of authority in these last years. Leonardo, in
-the seclusion of the monastery, had lately heard that
-Borgia&rsquo;s army had even been at the gates of Florence.</p>
-<p>The letter addressed to Leonardo was an offer to assume
-the post of Architect and Military Engineer to
-His Excellency, Cesare Borgia. He thought of Ludovico
-Sforza&mdash;defeated and captured at the battle of Novara
-just a year ago as he attempted to regain his dukedom.
-Now the duke was a prisoner at Loches in Touraine;
-Leonardo had written of him, &ldquo;The duke lost his State,
-his personal possessions and his liberty, and none of his
-enterprises have been completed.&rdquo; And Leonardo also
-thought of his equestrian monument still standing in the
-castle being used for target practice by the French
-archers. Like the duke, nothing of his own had been
-completed either. Perhaps this Borgia offer was an opportunity.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_93">93</span>
-Leonardo decided to accept it.</p>
-<p>In May of 1502, after having presented himself to
-Cesare Borgia in Rome, Leonardo began his hectic
-travels through Tuscany and Umbria. He was to inspect
-the fortresses and cities of Cesare&rsquo;s new conquests there,
-and to make whatever recommendations he felt necessary
-for their improvements. Arriving in Piombino, he
-at once set down a project for draining the marshes and
-reclaiming the land. Also, while he was here, he spent
-hours by the sea watching the waves curl in from the
-Adriatic and studying the crash of water over the
-beaches. Moving on to Arrezzo, he drew up the first in
-a series of remarkable maps for the army of Vitellozzo
-which, with the backing of Cesare Borgia, was marching
-against Florence. These maps are bird&rsquo;s-eye views of
-Tuscany and Umbria, and somewhat resemble modern
-aerial photographs. Drawn from Leonardo&rsquo;s own observations,
-the green mountains stand, according to their
-height, in relief, with the roads winding over them and
-down through the valleys. The streams and their tributaries
-are in blue and even the villages and cities are
-drawn with great exactitude. Indeed Leonardo had
-learned his lessons from old Toscanelli well, and he was
-one of the first to bring the art of cartography to such
-perfection.</p>
-<p>In July and August Leonardo was in Urbino and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_94">94</span>
-Pesaro, and by the 8th of August he had reached Rimini.
-Here he strengthened the fortifications and then rode
-quickly on to Cesena. Between Cesena, capital of the
-Romagna, and Porto Cesanatico, he spent from the middle
-of August to September planning a canal between
-the two, redesigning government buildings, and drawing
-up a new quarter to be built for the city of Cesena.
-At this time he constructed an instrument for telling
-him the speed of water currents in a stream. It told
-him whether the flow was swifter at the surface or at
-the bottom or on one side or the other of the stream&rsquo;s
-bed.</p>
-<p>In the meantime, Florence, alarmed at the growing
-power of Cesare Borgia, appealed to Charles d&rsquo;Amboise,
-Regent of Milan for France, to come to her aid.
-Charles responded in the absence of the French King
-and helped to protect Florence. The enemies of Cesare
-took advantage of this to form an alliance, and soon
-Cesare was being forced back from his newly won
-possessions. Cesare himself then hastened to Milan, and
-there he suddenly came face to face again with Louis,
-the King of France, who was on his way to Naples.
-Borgia, who could exert great charm and influence
-when he wished, persuaded the king that, all rumors
-to the contrary, he, Cesare, was fighting the enemies of
-France. Again he won over the French, which greatly
-strengthened his position. Then, from Pavia, he issued
-a decree placing every facility possible at Leonardo&rsquo;s
-disposal. In addition, he instructed all officials to help
-Leonardo in every matter, referring to him as &ldquo;our
-highly esteemed court architect.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>While Leonardo was in Porto Cesanatico, a delegation
-<span class="pb" id="Page_95">95</span>
-from Bayzid II, Sultan of Turkey, paid a visit to
-Cesare Borgia. Among other things the delegation was
-looking for an engineer to build a bridge between Constantinople
-and Pera to replace a temporary wooden
-structure. Leonardo designed for them a single-arched
-bridge with double ramps at either end (looking very
-much like a present-day &ldquo;thruway&rdquo; entrance). He provided
-that it should be approximately twelve hundred
-feet long, eighty feet wide, and one hundred and forty
-feet above the water.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig12">
-<img src="images/pg054.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="228" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Da Vinci&rsquo;s proposed bridge from Constantinople (Istanbul)
-to Pera. Looking very much like a modern &ldquo;thruway&rdquo;
-entrance, it was to have double ramps on both sides.</i></p>
-</div>
-<p>In his travels through the countryside, Leonardo
-could not help but notice how primitive the mills were.
-Feeling how strongly the wind blew in from the sea, he
-designed a windmill with a roof that turned with the
-sails. For the mechanism inside he devised a band brake&mdash;a
-semicircle of wood into which the large cogwheel
-of the mill was forced. This mill resembles the &ldquo;Dutch&rdquo;
-mills of the Netherlands and was among the first of its
-type to be brought into existence.</p>
-<p>In the fall Leonardo was at Imola. There he created
-<span class="pb" id="Page_96">96</span>
-another of his beautifully rendered maps. He drew this
-with the help of a magnetic compass of his own invention.
-It consisted of a board with an arc on it and a
-compass needle, and was probably the first magnetic
-needle on a horizontal axis. This time the map was of
-the city itself, the walls, the castle and the principal
-buildings all touched with color and the river winding
-through the fields. Drawn in the shape of a circle, it
-resembles a view through a telescope from directly
-above. In Imola, too, he met Niccol&ograve; Machiavelli, the
-famous historian and political scientist, who was an
-emissary from the Signoria, the Council which now
-governed Florence. These two men became friends and,
-later, collaborators in Leonardo&rsquo;s scheme to make the
-Arno river navigable to the sea.</p>
-<p>At this time Cesare Borgia, having achieved great success
-in his military campaigns and confident of his conquests,
-decided to return to Rome. With the disbanding
-of Borgia&rsquo;s headquarters at Imola, Leonardo&rsquo;s duties
-were finished. Together with his new friend Niccol&ograve;
-Machiavelli and two other Florentines, he left Imola and
-the service of Cesare Borgia to return to Florence.</p>
-<p>In January of 1503, a mathematician named Giovanni
-Battista Danti attempted a flight in a machine that he
-had designed. This flight was part of the entertainment
-at a wedding reception in Perugia. Danti climbed into
-his apparatus on top of the tower of St. Mary of the
-Virgin. It was pushed off into the air, hovered a few
-seconds, then began slowly drifting toward the ground.
-But suddenly, one of its wings hit a building projection
-and it crashed. Danti was carried away with a broken
-leg.</p>
-<p>The news of the event traveled quickly to Florence.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_97">97</div>
-<p>When Leonardo heard about it, he eagerly questioned
-all those who had either seen it or had heard it described
-first hand. Danti&rsquo;s attempted flight excited Leonardo
-for now he realized that he was no longer alone in his
-search. With a sense of urgency he returned to the
-problems of flying. He felt now that the solution to
-flight might be in the swift gusts of air through the
-ravines and the spread wings of the eagle drifting high
-in the sky.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_98">98</div>
-<h2 id="c10"><span class="small">10</span>
-<br /><i>Shattered Hopes</i></h2>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/chapter.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="49" />
-</div>
-<p>Before Leonardo could return to the problem of flight,
-however, he was again faced with the necessity of supporting
-himself and his growing household. The small
-fees he received for taking on apprentices hardly covered
-the cost of housing and feeding them. Moreover,
-the equipment he had to buy for his scientific researches
-added further to his strained budget. So, when a servant
-from Francesco del Giocondo, a rich Florentine merchant,
-presented himself at the gate with the request
-that Leonardo accept a commission to paint Francesco&rsquo;s
-wife, Leonardo was only too glad to accept. The name
-of Francesco&rsquo;s wife was Madonna Lisa, or Mona Lisa
-for short. Leonardo painted her portrait on and off for
-the next three years. Thus, what started as a minor commission
-ended as the one painting&mdash;in addition to the
-&ldquo;Last Supper&rdquo;&mdash;that most people today associate with
-<span class="pb" id="Page_99">99</span>
-the name of Leonardo da Vinci.</p>
-<p>Having secured this work, Leonardo turned back to
-his studies of birds in flight and the nature of air. The
-soaring wings of eagles and hawks and the way they
-rode the currents with hardly a dip of their spread wings
-guided Leonardo&rsquo;s thinking from pure mechanics to
-machines that act more on the principle of the glider.
-He proposed to write a treatise on the nature of birds&rsquo;
-flight, and, with his usual thoroughness, he began to
-weigh, dissect, and reconstruct various types of birds
-and their wing structure. He realized that one of the
-main difficulties of gliding was maintaining balance, or,
-more accurately, maintaining the center of gravity.
-From previous observations Leonardo had noted that
-man is capable of making the same motions that a bird
-does. He had also measured the strength of a man&rsquo;s legs
-and had calculated that man has twice the power in his
-leg muscles that he needs for standing. Consequently
-he began to redesign his machine making use of man&rsquo;s
-arms and legs to operate or &ldquo;flap&rdquo; the wings instead of
-standing him on a platform.</p>
-<p>The first of Leonardo&rsquo;s new designs was a sort of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_100">100</span>
-harness apparatus strapped across the shoulders of the
-flyer who was supposed to be able to keep himself balanced
-by moving the lower part of his body. He could
-manipulate the flight by handles that were connected
-to the flexible, outer parts of the wings. These wings
-were designed from the webbed wings of the bat. Surprisingly
-enough, this device closely resembled the experimental
-gliders used by Otto Lilienthal almost four
-centuries later in Germany.</p>
-<p>Leonardo was now approaching other solutions to
-pure flight when further hostilities interrupted his
-work. Florence and Pisa were in bitter rivalry, and their
-struggle had assumed the proportions of a major war.
-The Florentine army was now practically at the gates
-of Pisa. Niccol&ograve; Machiavelli urged the Signoria to enlist
-the help of Leonardo da Vinci, who might be able to
-think of an immediate plan for destroying Pisa and her
-army. Never one to think in terms of an immediate
-battle or a temporary success, Leonardo put forth a
-daring and sweeping plan that would forever reduce
-the power of Pisa. The plan was as simple as it was
-monumental&mdash;divert the Arno river from its course into
-two canals that would empty into the sea at Leghorn
-south of Pisa. In this way, Pisa would lose her water
-supply and her opening to the sea.</p>
-<p>The plan met with immediate approval and by the
-end of July 1503, Leonardo was sent out to survey the
-entire course of the river. He was accompanied by Giovanni
-&ldquo;the Piper,&rdquo; a man who was frequently employed
-on minor engineering projects and who was the
-official player of the pipes to the city of Florence.
-Giovanni was also the father of Benvenuto Cellini, who
-became the most famous goldsmith of the Renaissance.
-As they made their way to Pisa, Leonardo made some
-more of his extraordinary maps of the area, paying particular
-attention to the course of the Arno and its tributaries.
-These maps later inspired him to plan a whole
-<span class="pb" id="Page_101">101</span>
-series showing the main watersheds of Italy.</p>
-<p>When he rode into the Florentine camp drawn up
-before Pisa, Leonardo designed from his observations
-and maps, a dam on the Arno to regulate the course of
-the river. This bird&rsquo;s-eye view map is a marvel of exactness.
-It shows the flow of the river hitting the dam with
-its swirling backwash and overflow. Leonardo&rsquo;s knowledge
-of the movement of water was so great and his
-craftsmanship in drawing so fine that the water in this
-map seems to flow before one&rsquo;s eyes. One of the main
-problems in regulating the Arno was its tendency to
-continually be shifting its bed by the deposits of new
-sediment, and Leonardo realized it would be a long
-time before this project could be completed.</p>
-<p>When he returned to Florence he presented to the
-Signoria, as part of his survey, various machines to
-hasten the excavation of the Arno. He had designed a
-crane that would assist in the digging out of two different
-levels at the same time. He also submitted the results
-of his calculations on the saving of muscular energy
-by the use of such machines. In addition, Leonardo
-proposed to use the water in the canals for irrigation
-purposes and had even calculated what the volume and
-velocity of a jet of water would be if projected from an
-opening in the bottom of the canal wall into an irrigation
-ditch. As if this were not enough, he had invented
-a practical method of piling as a foundation for the
-lock-basins to protect them against the dangers of erosion.</p>
-<p>A separate map of this period on the flow of rivers in
-<span class="pb" id="Page_102">102</span>
-general was intended to relate to his treatise on the
-nature of water. In this treatise is the first outline of the
-fundamental principles of hydrodynamics, as for example:</p>
-<p>The velocity of a current increases with the slope and
-decreases with the winding of the riverbed.</p>
-<p>The volume of a river is in proportion to the width
-of its bed, the slope and the depth of the water being
-equal.</p>
-<p>The slope and width being equal, the speed of the
-current is greatest in the deepest part of the river.</p>
-<p>The excavation force increases at the narrowest section
-of the river.</p>
-<p class="tb">Because of the grumbling of the military commanders
-at what they considered a waste of time, Machiavelli
-had to intervene with the Signoria before Leonardo was
-sent out again with documents of authority to continue
-with his plans. He spent well into the fall surveying the
-Arno and in October he was back in Florence.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile the fighting between Pisa and Florence
-had been lessened by two political changes. In August
-Pope Alexander VI had died and his son Cesare Borgia
-became seriously ill. The Republic of Florence was now
-free of its most dangerous enemies&mdash;the Borgias. The
-city relaxed in its new security and the hostilities between
-Florence and Pisa died down to an uneasy armed
-watch.</p>
-<p>Leonardo quickly took advantage of the situation to
-<span class="pb" id="Page_103">103</span>
-present an early dream of his to the Signoria. He again
-put forth his idea of a commercial canal to the sea and
-made mention of the great advantages there would be
-for all the mills, lumber yards, forges and other commercial
-interests in utilizing the water power that would
-be available from his project. Piero Soderini, the governor
-of the city-state of Florence, was impressed and
-thought of the glory it would bring to Florence and
-himself. He told Leonardo he would present it to the
-Signoria.</p>
-<p>Leonardo now plunged into a winter of great activity.
-Forced to draw from his savings, he had rejoined the
-guild of painters in October of 1503, and then applied
-for the commission of painting the murals in the council
-chamber of the Palace of the Signoria. It had been
-planned to decorate this great hall with scenes commemorating
-famous Florentine victories, and Leonardo
-chose the battle of Anghiari where the soldiers of Florence
-defeated the Milanese in 1440. In addition to working
-on the &ldquo;Mona Lisa&rdquo; and continuing with the canal
-project&mdash;for which he was now designing great suction
-pumps to lift rivers from one level to another&mdash;he
-turned again to astronomy and geology.</p>
-<p>Leonardo, while investigating the course of the upper
-Arno, had come across much evidence that the land
-there had at one time been completely under water.
-Various types of ancient ocean life and vegetation lay
-scattered in layers along the ridges of the mountains,
-and these Leonardo collected and brought back to his
-studio. He wrote, &ldquo;above the plains of Italy where now
-birds fly in flocks, fishes were wont to wander in large
-shoals.&rdquo; He reread Ptolemy, the ancient Greek geographer
-Strabo, and even Sir John Mandeville, an English
-author of travel books, in his quest for knowledge of
-distant places. He talked to travelers, sailors, and wrote
-to friends to send him information about the countries
-they had seen or lived in. Strabo, in particular, had set
-forth the doctrine that the earth&rsquo;s transformation had
-taken place by the forces of volcanoes and water, but
-the wisdom of these early men had been obscured by
-<span class="pb" id="Page_104">104</span>
-the closed minds of the Middle Ages.</p>
-<p>Even in his own time of reawakening knowledge&mdash;the
-Renaissance&mdash;Leonardo had to contend with the
-combined superstition of the Church and the ignorance
-of misguided scholars. For example, the Church believed
-in the great flood, as described in the Bible, and
-the scholars claimed that if what Leonardo said were
-true&mdash;that the earth was the result of an evolutionary
-process&mdash;there would have been written records. To
-this latter Leonardo responded, &ldquo;... sufficient for us
-is the testimony of things produced in the salt waters
-and now found again in the high mountains far from
-the seas.&rdquo; But Leonardo&rsquo;s conception of the evolution
-of the earth was mistaken in one respect. He regarded
-the earth as organic&mdash;living&mdash;and the flow of water he
-believed to be like the flow of blood in man. Indeed,
-according to Leonardo, all living creatures were reflections
-of a living, breathing earth. It was only when he
-again turned his eyes inquiringly toward the moon and
-the laws of the universe that he began to realize his
-error.</p>
-<p>It had been the idea that the earth was the center of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_105">105</span>
-the universe which supported Leonardo&rsquo;s theory of an
-organic earth. Yet after years of observation and study
-he abandoned this theory and, with the eye of a man
-centuries ahead of his time, he wrote in his notes, &ldquo;The
-moon has every month a winter and a summer. And it
-has greater colds and greater heats and its equinoxes are
-colder than ours.&rdquo; He went further and identified the
-elements existing on the moon such as &ldquo;water, air, and
-fire,&rdquo; and described them and their functions as being
-like those on our own earth. In so doing he recognized
-the existence of the moon as a solid in space, reflecting
-the light of the sun&mdash;one of many &ldquo;stars&rdquo; in a universe.
-With his acceptance of this concept he realized that the
-earth could not be organic.</p>
-<p class="tb">In May of 1504, the Signoria complained to Leonardo
-that there had been no progress on the proposed paintings
-for their council chamber, even though he had
-already been partially paid for them. Accordingly, he
-was forced to sign a document that he must be finished
-by February of next year or refund all monies paid him.
-As was his custom he had made many preliminary drawings.
-Although he was well acquainted with horses he
-had again researched their anatomy and actions. Pages
-of rearing, frightened horses and men in combat covered
-his studio tables. On one of these pages there are
-sketches of the heads of a lion, some horses and a man&mdash;all
-with fierce expressions on their faces. Here Leonardo
-hinted at the comparative anatomy of expression
-in man and animal that Darwin was to write about
-almost four hundred years later.</p>
-<p>But the paintings could wait, for now the Arno River
-<span class="pb" id="Page_106">106</span>
-was in spring flood. The time had arrived to make the
-first attempts at diverting the river into its new course.
-Leonardo was again in the field supervising the work.
-There had been much opposition to Leonardo&rsquo;s canal
-from both the army captains and the Signoria. It was
-called a whim and a crazy idea, but Piero Soderini and
-Niccol&ograve; Machiavelli were stubborn in their defense of
-Leonardo&rsquo;s plan and they overcame all opposition to it.
-And indeed, the raising of the sluice gates was successful
-and the Arno actually flowed into its new bed. The
-tensions in the camp and in the Council of Florence
-were eased. The only sad person was Leonardo, for he
-had just learned of the death of his father.</p>
-<p>Leonardo felt the loss deeply. Outwardly, however,
-he only acknowledged the death of his father at a distance.
-Not only had Leonardo and his father drifted
-apart over the years, Piero left nothing to Leonardo in
-his will. His father&rsquo;s other children quarreled among
-themselves over what money he did leave. Leonardo&rsquo;s
-one friend in the family was Uncle Francesco, who was
-still living in Vinci. When he heard of his brother&rsquo;s will,
-Francesco made out a will of his own and left everything
-to the nephew he loved&mdash;Leonardo.</p>
-<p>After having successfully diverted the Arno river, it
-was now necessary for Leonardo to return to the painting
-commissioned by the Signoria for its council chamber.
-But recently, Leonardo had suffered a rebuff in this
-work. Originally he had been given the whole room to
-do but now the opposite wall had been assigned to another
-man&mdash;Michelangelo Buonarroti. Leonardo had
-first met the young Michelangelo when he helped to
-judge the best location for Michelangelo&rsquo;s monumental
-statue of David. The two men were opposites in every
-way. Leonardo, fifty-two years old, carefully dressed,
-cool and detached, was a man whose every action was
-the result of a thoughtful and analytical mind. Michelangelo,
-twenty-six years old, his clothes rumpled and
-covered with marble dust, was passionate and moody&mdash;an
-impulsive youth totally dedicated to art. They did
-not like each other, and now Leonardo was forced into
-<span class="pb" id="Page_107">107</span>
-a rivalry for which he had no heart.</p>
-<p>The duel between these two giants of art aroused the
-whole of Florence and there was a constant stream of
-people watching them at work. Michelangelo was given
-a studio in the hospital of Sant&rsquo; Onofrio and Leonardo
-was working in the Papal Chamber in Santa Maria
-Novella. Among the many people who came to watch
-Leonardo was a young man of nineteen. He was already
-a pupil of Perugino and the experience of meeting and
-learning from Leonardo was to influence him the rest of
-his life. His name was Raffaello Sanzio&mdash;one of the
-great Renaissance painters of Italy and known to us
-by the name of Raphael.</p>
-<p>While Leonardo worked at Santa Maria Novella he
-had the opportunity of continuing his studies in anatomy.
-Dissections at that time were novelties and when
-one was performed the doors were thrown open to the
-public. Leonardo must have attended the public dissections
-at the Church of Santa Croce. Now at Santa Maria
-Novella there was a hospital, and here Leonardo was
-able to continue his own dissections without interruption.
-In a cool room below the hospital where bodies
-were kept Leonardo worked late into the night. By the
-flickering lights of candles and in the silence of the world
-about him he studied, drew, and wrote in his notes of
-the wonders of the human body.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_108">108</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig13">
-<img src="images/pg061.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="795" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>In a cool room below the hospital, Leonardo worked late
-into the night.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_109">109</div>
-<p>He performed autopsies on people who had died
-natural deaths&mdash;a special permission granted to him by
-the monks of the church, and among these autopsies are
-the first written reports of some of the diseases that are
-the causes of death. Arteriosclerosis, or stony growths in
-the blood vessels, and pulmonary tuberculosis, a nut-like
-growth in the lung, are among the discoveries
-Leonardo made in his lonely searches, although he did
-not use these medical names for them.</p>
-<p>Above all Leonardo was attracted to the function of
-the muscles, especially those in the arms and legs. So
-faithfully, in fact, did he record the origin and insertion
-of all the various muscles that these drawings can be
-used as anatomical models today. Moreover, he believed
-that a good drawing was worth pages of words describing
-human anatomy. The muscles were rendered as cords
-so as to better understand their function. He described
-this function as one of pulling instead of pushing and he
-noted that for every muscle there is an opposing muscle.
-When one contracts the other expands. For example,
-when you tighten the biceps in your arm you can feel
-the looseness of the triceps, the muscle on the opposite
-side.</p>
-<p class="tb">As the end of the summer of 1504 approached, Leonardo&rsquo;s
-dream of the canal from Florence to the sea was
-destroyed. The summer had been hot and without rain.
-The water in the canal dried up and the Arno river
-returned to its original course. All the old arguments
-against the plan were revived. The Florentine army
-captains rebelled against the job of defending a useless
-project. Again Soderini and Machiavelli intervened.
-After heated debates in the Council of Eighty, which
-had been called into special session, Machiavelli himself
-was sent out to oversee the work. It was brought
-almost to completion when in late October disaster
-struck. The rains that had failed to come in summer fell
-from the heavens in great cloudbursts. Storm after storm
-swept the valleys. The workmen left and the soldiers
-were recalled. The Pisan army rushed in to fill up the
-diggings and one final storm washed away the dream
-<span class="pb" id="Page_110">110</span>
-to nothing but eroded mounds of dirt.</p>
-<p>Leonardo buried his disappointment in other work.
-When the drawing for the Battle of Anghiari was ready
-for transfer to the wall of the council chamber, he had
-a special scaffolding made of his own invention which
-worked on the principle of a pair of scissors standing
-on end, with a long platform on top. As the legs were
-spread the scaffolding was lowered and when they
-were pinched together it was raised. The wall had been
-prepared with a special mixture which he hoped would
-bring out the brilliance of his tempera colors. With several
-assistants who had been assigned to him by the
-Signoria the violence of the Battle of Anghiari was transferred
-to the wall and the actual painting was begun.</p>
-<p>During the winter months Leonardo would relax from
-his work on the huge painting and his dissections to roam
-the country around Florence. He visited the slaughterhouses
-where the animals were killed and prepared for
-market. Here he was able to examine the hearts of animals
-just slaughtered and to note that the heart retained
-its action until the body was almost cold. He made a
-glass model of the aorta (the main artery leading from
-the heart) of an ox with which he could experiment on
-the flow of the blood. He intended to add to it a glass
-tube for one of the semilunar valves of the heart. He
-also experimented with a frog, dissecting its brain, heart,
-and entrails and noted that it ceased to twitch only when
-the spinal cord was severed. In his notes, he wrote, &ldquo;The
-frog instantly dies when the spinal cord is pierced; and
-previous to this it lived without head, without heart or
-any bowels or intestines or skin; and here therefore it
-would seem lies the foundation of movement and life.&rdquo;
-He was of course searching for the reasons that muscles
-<span class="pb" id="Page_111">111</span>
-moved and from where the impulses originated.</p>
-<p>One of Leonardo&rsquo;s favorite places to visit was Fiesole
-where his uncle Allessandro Amadori lived. Uncle Allessandro
-was the brother of Leonardo&rsquo;s first stepmother
-and, since he had loved her so much, he likewise felt
-an affection for Allessandro. At Fiesole, which rises
-over Florence in a steep ascent, Leonardo could watch
-the birds circling in the air below him.</p>
-<p>On these lofty heights, he would unfold his drawings
-of flying machines. Leonardo had progressed now to a
-point where an actual flight was all that was left. He had
-designed a sort of flying boat&mdash;a shell with wings that
-moved up and down and he had introduced a tail like
-that of a bird. He had noted that the tail of a bird acts
-as a rudder, a stabilizer and a brake when landing.</p>
-<p>But Leonardo&rsquo;s most recent design was one that was
-called an <i>ornithopter</i>. It consisted of a wooden frame,
-two huge wings like a bat&rsquo;s, a series of ropes and pulleys
-and a windlass, all planned with the lightest of materials.
-The flyer, lying prone in the frame, his feet in leather
-stirrups connected to the wings by pulleys, would move
-his feet up and down to flap the wings while, at the
-same time, he operated the windlass with his arms in
-order to guide the machine. Soon he hoped to build this
-machine and try it out.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_112">112</div>
-<p>Meanwhile, Leonardo returned to his painting in the
-council chamber with impatience, for spring was approaching
-and the time to finally realize his dream of
-flying would be at hand. Aside from an assistant who had
-tested the pedals and windlass, no one knew of his plan
-to actually put his machine in the air.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig14">
-<img src="images/pg063.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="282" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>The</i> ornithopter, <i>one of Leonardo&rsquo;s designs for a &ldquo;flying
-machine.&rdquo; By pumping his feet in the stirrups, the flyer
-could flap the device&rsquo;s wings.</i></p>
-</div>
-<p>Weeks passed and the painting was almost finished.
-The huge wall was covered with plunging horses and
-embattled soldiers. The colors were brilliant on the
-special mixture he had prepared for the wall&mdash;but they
-were not drying as they should have. Something was
-wrong. To speed the drying process, Leonardo had a
-special fire built in the room that directed the heat onto
-the painting. Spectators were allowed to watch as the
-waves of hot air rose against the wall. Then&mdash;disaster
-began slowly with a small trickle of paint from the top!
-Before anybody could put out the fire, the great figures
-and horses slowly melted down the wall in shiny, sticky
-streaks of color. Leonardo fled the room in an agony of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_113">113</span>
-shame.</p>
-<p>With his own friends discouraged, the Signoria hostile,
-and the friends of Michelangelo triumphant, Leonardo
-went back to Fiesole. He went back with his secret
-dream of flight. The world would soon forget the
-Battle of Anghiari&mdash;but the conquest of the air, if he
-could achieve it, would live forever.</p>
-<p>In the spring of 1506, from the slopes of Monte Cecero
-near Fiesole, legend tells us that a great bird sailed into
-the air and disappeared. No one knows whether Leonardo
-actually flew his machine or not but Girolamo
-Cardano, the son of a friend of Leonardo, wrote, long
-after Leonardo had died, &ldquo;Leonardo da Vinci also attempted
-to fly, but he failed. He was a fine painter.&rdquo;
-Another dream had been shattered.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_114">114</div>
-<h2 id="c11"><span class="small">11</span>
-<br /><i>The Return to Milan</i></h2>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/chapter.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="49" />
-</div>
-<p>Leonardo felt his fifty-four years that spring day in
-1506. The bitterness of his failures and the frustration
-of his dreams added considerably to the weight of his
-years. All morning he had wasted in argument with
-Soderini and the Signoria. If it had not been for the
-letter from Charles d&rsquo;Amboise, Viceroy of the King of
-France for Milan, he would have felt like a beggar.
-Charles d&rsquo;Amboise had been appointed military governor
-of Milan by Louis XII ever since the French had
-conquered that city and captured Duke Ludovico
-Sforza. But the authority of the letter had finally won
-a grudging consent from Soderini. Leonardo looked
-about him to see if he had forgotten anything and slowly
-climbed onto his horse. He nodded to Salai, his apprentice,
-looked back to see if his servant had the pack-horses
-ready, and started down the street leading the small
-<span class="pb" id="Page_115">115</span>
-procession. He was going back to Milan.</p>
-<p>Leonardo took out the letter and reread it. The words
-were respectful and admiring&mdash;and in French. They
-requested the presence of &ldquo;Ma&icirc;tre Leonard de Vinci&rdquo;
-at the court of Charles d&rsquo;Amboise, for purposes of painting
-and other &ldquo;diverse projects&rdquo; for the King of France.
-The letter restored a measure of confidence to Leonardo&rsquo;s
-self-respect. Before Leonardo left, Soderini had
-made him sign a letter in which Leonardo promised to
-return to Florence within three months and to leave
-a deposit of one hundred and fifty florins which would
-be held against his return. It was signed, notarized and
-dated May 30, 1506. Nevertheless, Leonardo had decided
-to accept the French envoy&rsquo;s offer; moreover,
-he looked forward to the prospect of returning to his
-vineyard at Porta Vercellina and the understanding of
-a sympathetic patron.</p>
-<p>Indeed, Charles d&rsquo;Amboise turned out to be more
-than sympathetic. He recognized Leonardo as a great
-artist; but even more, he was one of the few patrons
-who could appreciate the magnitude of Leonardo&rsquo;s
-scientific and mechanical genius. In the court of Charles,
-Leonardo once more enjoyed a time of peace and an
-assured income. The French Vice-Chancellor of Milan,
-Geffroy Carles, who was second in command, was also
-a distinguished scholar and a patron of the arts and
-natural sciences. With the admiration and support of
-these two men and especially with the distant backing of
-King Louis XII of France, Leonardo&rsquo;s dismal memories
-<span class="pb" id="Page_116">116</span>
-of Florence began to fade.</p>
-<p>Leonardo&rsquo;s three months&rsquo; allotted absence from Florence,
-however, were soon past and a letter arrived from
-Soderini demanding either Leonardo&rsquo;s return or a forfeiture
-of the one hundred and fifty florins deposit. Now
-a tug-of-war developed between the Viceroy of Milan
-and the governor of Florence over Leonardo. The Signoria
-reminded Charles that Leonardo had his work to
-complete, while Charles d&rsquo;Amboise and Geffroy Carles
-demanded an extension of time. One month more was
-granted. More letters were exchanged until the affair became
-so heated that the King of France himself intervened.
-In January of 1507 the French King informed
-Soderini and the Signoria that Leonardo was &ldquo;not to
-move from Milan until our arrival.&rdquo; Since Florence at
-this time was under the protection of the French, such
-final authority silenced the Signoria. Shortly afterwards
-Leonardo discharged his obligation to the Signoria by
-relinquishing the one hundred and fifty florins, and he
-at last became free from the demands of his native city.</p>
-<p>On May 24, 1507 King Louis XII re-entered Milan
-with all the splendor and color that France and the
-Dukedom of Milan could confer upon their ruler.
-Knights in armor and the ladies of the courts followed
-the king who rode in flowing white and gold under a
-canopy of blue decorated with the lilies of France.</p>
-<p>With such pomp and display in Milan, Leonardo was
-<span class="pb" id="Page_117">117</span>
-soon back at his old occupation of designing pageants
-and tournaments. While some of the people from the
-days of the Sforzas returned, not many remembered
-Duke Ludovico, who was slowly dying in a French
-dungeon. Among the people that Leonardo now met,
-there appeared Francesco de&rsquo; Melzi, a noble from an old
-Milanese family, who entered Leonardo&rsquo;s life at this
-time as a pupil. Soon the young man became like a son
-to Leonardo. Of handsome appearance, he had the sensitivity
-to appreciate the essential loneliness of Leonardo
-and so, almost without realizing it, he filled a gap in
-Leonardo&rsquo;s life that was to last until the end of his days.</p>
-<p>Yet, as Franceso de&rsquo; Melzi opened one door of Leonardo&rsquo;s
-life another door closed. He received word that
-his beloved uncle Francesco had died at Vinci and that
-he had become the heir to his uncle&rsquo;s property. No
-sooner had this news been delivered when Leonardo was
-notified that Giuliano, a son of Piero, and now a lawyer
-in his own right, was contesting the will. All the frustrations
-of his life in Florence now rose to an angry pitch
-and he set out once again for Florence to fight for his
-own rights.</p>
-<p>Wisely, Leonardo had armed himself with letters from
-his new, influential patrons and even one from King
-Louis himself recommending, &ldquo;... we request that you
-will cause this dispute to be settled in the best and briefest
-delivery of justice....&rdquo; In August of that same year&mdash;1507&mdash;Charles
-d&rsquo;Amboise added his personal letter
-suggesting that the king could not spare Leonardo too
-long from the court at Milan.</p>
-<p>It was with the title of Painter and Engineer to the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_118">118</span>
-King of France that Leonardo rode back to Florence to
-await the outcome of the judges in his case. He went to
-stay with a sculptor friend, Giovanni Rustici, a man of
-thirty-five and also an ex-student of Verrochio. They
-lived in a house lent to Rustici by a wealthy scholar and
-patron named Piero Martelli.</p>
-<p>Leonardo soon found that he and Rustici had much in
-common. Rustici, too, collected the odds and ends of
-his journeys into the country. Flying about the house
-were a tame eagle and a raven, while, at dinner, a pet
-porcupine begged for food. Rustici, however, was a
-believer in alchemy and magic. To practice these arts
-the young man devoted one room to the strange mixtures
-which bubbled over flames as he attempted to change
-base metals into gold, or to call upon the spirits to predict
-the future.</p>
-<p>Leonardo settled into the life of the house very
-quickly and even helped his friend on an important
-sculpture commission. This was a group composition of
-St. John between the Pharisee and the Levite for over
-the doors of the baptistry. He also started to gather together
-his scattered notes on all the subjects that he had
-written about, going through them making corrections
-and erasing the repetitions. Possibly Leonardo was considering
-the publication of all his material for he wrote,
-&ldquo;Begun at Florence in the house of Piero di Braccio
-Martelli, on the 22nd day of March, 1508. This will be
-a collection without order, made up of many sheets
-which I have copied here, hoping afterwards to arrange
-them in order in their proper places according to the
-subjects of which they treat....&rdquo; This &ldquo;collection
-without order&rdquo; of almost forty years extended into practically
-all branches of human knowledge, founded on
-years of observation and experiment. Indeed, it was the
-magnificent effort of one extraordinary mind to push
-back the curtains of ignorance in order to let the light of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_119">119</span>
-natural truth shine through to mankind.</p>
-<p>In addition, Leonardo returned to his studies of anatomy
-and comparative anatomy. For this latter he made
-many beautiful drawings of the legs of animals as compared
-to those of man. With them, Leonardo tried
-to indicate man&rsquo;s place in the natural order of the world.
-He pointed out that our physical bodies are basically
-the same as those of animals, and that the muscular and
-organic differences are those of function only. For example,
-bird and man have the same chest muscles, called
-the pectoralis. But the bird, in order to fly, has developed
-these into powerful instruments of motion. Man, on the
-other hand, has learned to stand and move in an upright
-position. He has developed the muscles of the back,
-called the erectores spinae, and those of the buttocks to
-hold him erect. Leonardo intended to enlarge upon his
-studies of comparative anatomy to include all living
-creatures, even the insects.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile, the Viceroy of Milan was becoming impatient
-for Leonardo&rsquo;s return. The judgment against his
-half-brothers had been settled in Leonardo&rsquo;s favor, and
-he hastened back to Milan. By the summer of 1508 he
-was once more in the routine of the court&rsquo;s activities.
-King Louis had granted Leonardo a regular allowance
-and it was the first time he had enjoyed such a long
-freedom from the concerns of earning a living. With
-these steady payments Leonardo now had the leisure and
-support to pursue his own multitude of interests.</p>
-<p>As his notes began to take shape and he thought of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_120">120</span>
-printing them, it was natural for the inventive Leonardo
-to design his own printing press. It is one of the
-earliest such designs on record. Because the carrying bed
-which held the type and the paper was automatically
-adjusted to the handlebar, the press could be operated by
-one man. Besides his notes Leonardo also considered
-printing a work by Roger Bacon, the thirteenth century
-English scientist.</p>
-<p>This project for printing his own books, however,
-was never realized by Leonardo. Lately, he had received
-a commission which took him back in memory to the
-days of Ludovico. The subject was Marshal Gian Giacomo
-Trivulzio, a soldier-of-fortune. Originally this man
-was a loyal commander of Galeazzo Sforza&rsquo;s but when
-Ludovico came to power he had had Trivulzio banished
-from Milan. Embittered, Trivulzio had become a stubborn
-enemy of Ludovico from that time on, serving
-under any banner that marched against the house of
-Sforza. A stocky, square-faced man, his body was covered
-with the scars of many battles. He had been fighting
-with the French ever since the time Ludovico had betrayed
-Charles VIII. Trivulzio had seen the great monument
-that Leonardo had modeled and, although it was
-riddled by French arrows and damaged by wind and
-rain, the Marshal was impressed and wished for a similar
-memorial to himself.</p>
-<p>Leonardo set to work immediately. His past experience
-with the Sforza monument was now to his advantage.
-This time there was no need for experimenting.
-He knew how much material he needed and the approximate
-cost of everything including the casting. He
-submitted an estimate of three thousand and forty&mdash;six
-ducats for the completed work, one hundred of which
-would go to Leonardo. The sum was acceptable to Trivulzio
-<span class="pb" id="Page_121">121</span>
-and Leonardo began his preliminary studies.</p>
-<p>As he gathered the material for this new equestrian
-statue, Leonardo and the French Viceroy Charles d&rsquo;Amboise
-became interested in the further canalization of
-the plains of Lombardy. The use of canals and locks had
-been in practice for roughly a hundred years and around
-Milan there were already some fifty miles of canals and
-about twenty-five locks. Leonardo started another survey
-of the area. In his imagination, he envisioned a vast
-hydraulic engineering project.</p>
-<p>On September 12, 1508 Leonardo announced in his
-notes the beginning of a book on the nature of water. He
-had decided to separate this book from the one on hydraulics
-because it was necessary to separate theory and
-practice. His pages treating the science of hydraulics,
-or the practical applications of water power, had reached
-to &ldquo;forty books of benefits.&rdquo; By the spring of 1509 he
-had expanded his notes on the nature of water to include
-the greatest wave to the smallest raindrop.</p>
-<p>Concerning the practical applications of water power,
-Leonardo put forth many designs for new locks. He
-introduced new methods of raising the gates by windlasses
-and chains which could easily be set in motion by
-one man. But most important is Leonardo&rsquo;s discovery of
-the use of centrifugal force for draining marshes&mdash;the
-ancestor of the centrifugal pump. When you rapidly
-rotate a stick in a pail of water, the water spins in a spiral
-rising on the sides, and, if you rotate the stick fast enough
-it bares the bottom of the pail. When you remove the
-stick suddenly, the water continues to whirl as it slowly
-subsides.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_122">122</div>
-<p>This is basically the same principle Leonardo used to
-raise the water from a marsh to a level above the sea
-so that it could be drained away.</p>
-<p>The centrifugal pump was also used with a hydraulic
-screw which converted water power to mechanical
-power. The force of a stream of water was injected into
-the base of a vertical cylinder. In the base of this cylinder
-was a six-bladed propeller mounted on a vertical shaft.
-The force of the water turned the screw and at the same
-time the water was forced to rise in the cylinder to an
-outlet above. The turning propeller revolved the vertical
-shaft. This shaft, emerging from the top of the
-cylinder, turned a cogged wheel. This wheel was joined
-to another cogged wheel mounted on a horizontal shaft,
-thus providing the mechanical power. Not only is this
-the forerunner of the turbine, but the use of the propeller,
-itself, for propulsion in water, was a new idea not
-to be thought of again until the eighteenth century. For
-certain types of hydraulic pumps he conceived of the
-cone-headed mitre valve still in use today.</p>
-<p>Leonardo, besides studying the practical applications
-of water power, explored the very nature of water itself.
-In his proposed books on this subject he intended to
-examine why clouds and fog form, why rain falls and
-the raindrop itself&mdash;even how the raindrop is held together.
-He understood the nature of capillary attraction,
-which holds the raindrop together, and his notes show
-us that he was exploring the science of hydrostatics
-which relates to the pressure and equilibrium of liquids in
-general.</p>
-<p>Now that Leonardo had a steady income and the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_123">123</span>
-relief from meeting painting commissions by fixed dates,
-he was free to explore his other favorite avenues of
-knowledge. It seemed that his ever-active mind could
-never stop roaming over the whole field of scientific
-knowledge. He continued with his early interests&mdash;the
-nature and movement of air, astronomy and geometry.
-He was also still concerned with movement and weight,
-for he set down in his notes, &ldquo;The thing which moves
-will be so much the more difficult to stop as it is of
-greater weight.&rdquo; This is a hint at a principle formulated
-by Isaac Newton almost two hundred years later
-in his First Law of Motion&mdash;the law concerning inertia.
-For example, the motion of an arrow shot into the air
-maintains itself in flight so long as the influence of the
-initial force is maintained in it.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig15">
-<img src="images/pg068.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="597" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Da Vinci&rsquo;s cone-headed mitre valve for use in a hydraulic
-pump.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_124">124</div>
-<p>On a note dated April 28, 1509 he wrote, &ldquo;Having for
-a long time sought to square the angle of two curved
-sides ... I have solved the proposition at ten o&rsquo;clock
-on the evening of Sunday.&rdquo; As always, Leonardo was
-deeply involved in the study of mathematics. Too deep
-perhaps to recognize the new rumblings of war.</p>
-<p>Louis XII, still pursuing his campaign in northern
-Italy, had again arrived in Milan amid the salutes of the
-French artillery. Following his personal banner of a
-gold porcupine on a white field, he had come back prepared
-to do battle with the Venetians whose power, as
-it diminished in the east, was extending westward into
-Italy. Alarmed at this Venetian expansion, the French
-King had allied himself with Pope Julius II and the
-powers of Europe to form the League of Cambrai to
-push back this threat. Charles d&rsquo;Amboise, the French
-Viceroy, had already taken to the field and at the castle
-of Cassano, overlooking the Adda river near Milan, he
-awaited the arrival of his king.</p>
-<p>By the end of May, Leonardo was in the saddle once
-more. Surrounded by the best knights of France and
-the nobles of Milan, he personally accompanied the
-French King as military engineer to the meeting with
-the Viceroy of Milan at Cassano.</p>
-<p>During the next three months, through the battles
-and defeat of the Venetians at Aquadello where sixteen
-thousand dead were left on the field, and the siege
-of Caravaggio and the capture of Peschiera, Leonardo
-served as military consultant and map maker. More than
-ever his eye was attracted to the possibilities of utilizing
-the many rivers they crossed both for warfare and commerce.
-He envisioned making the Adda river navigable
-from Milan to Lake Como. During this time, he devised
-not only a revolving bridge but even one of two layers
-in a single span&mdash;the upper level for pedestrians and the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_125">125</span>
-lower one for vehicles.</p>
-<p>By July, Leonardo had returned with the king and
-the French army to Milan. Here was planned a great
-celebration of the French victory over the Venetians.
-In front of the cathedral, to the delight of the hundreds
-of spectators, Leonardo devised a mechanical lion scaring
-a dragon out of an artificial lake into the beak of a cock
-which picked the dragon&rsquo;s eyes out. After the festivities
-Leonardo returned to his everyday work. In time, he
-had a thriving workshop and as he became more and
-more preoccupied with his scientific explorations, his
-art commissions were turned over to his assistants. He
-did continue, however, to work on the plans for Marshal
-Trivulzio&rsquo;s monument and in his preparatory work for
-this assignment he expanded his notes and drawings of
-comparative anatomy.</p>
-<p>This renewed interest in anatomy led him to attend
-a lecture in the winter of 1509. The lecturer was Marcantonio
-della Torre, a young man in his late twenties
-and one of the best-known anatomists of the times. He
-had been a professor at the University of Padua, but this
-city had fallen into the hands of the Venetians. Marcantonio
-was forced to flee Padua and had settled at Pavia.
-The two men, when they met, recognized in each other
-a devotion to science and they began a professional collaboration
-that grew into a friendship. Leonardo now
-developed his anatomy studies to the point where he is
-today recognized as the foremost medical anatomist of
-the Renaissance.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_126">126</div>
-<p>Returning to his dissections, Leonardo now proceeded
-to explore the heart and system of veins in the human
-body. His drawings of the heart are nearly perfect. Indeed,
-he was probably the first to discover the endocardium
-membrane that sheathes the valves and sinews
-of the heart. Also, he pictured and described the moderator
-band, &ldquo;the first cause of the motion of the heart.&rdquo;
-His work on this organ led him to the doorstep of discovering
-the circulation of the blood&mdash;later to be carried
-out by William Harvey in the seventeenth century.</p>
-<p>Further, Leonardo was the first to accurately draw a
-representation of the <i>foetus</i>, or unborn child, in the
-womb of its mother, writing in his notes that, &ldquo;we conclude
-therefore, that a single soul governs the bodies and
-nourishes the two.&rdquo; In addition, he drew a remarkable
-picture of the female figure and for the first time accurately
-placed her organic structure. In his notes, he also
-pointed the way to the laws governing metabolism when
-he wrote, &ldquo;The body of anything whatsoever that receives
-nourishment continually dies and is continually
-renewed....&rdquo; By pouring wax into a hole in the skull
-he made the first casts of the ventricles of the brain. Several
-hundred years were to pass before this method was
-rediscovered.</p>
-<p>As Leonardo&rsquo;s work progressed, his admiration for
-the complexity of the human body grew. Many times
-in the middle of explaining a section of anatomy he inserted
-a sentence or two of wonder or praise at the
-magnificent creation that is the human being. Indeed,
-these drawings and notes represent the sum of many,
-many dissections; moreover, Leonardo had to work
-under conditions that placed many obstacles in his
-path&mdash;the crude lights and instruments, the difficulties of
-obtaining corpses and, above all, the opposition of the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_127">127</span>
-superstitious and ignorant.</p>
-<p>The following year Leonardo entered in his notes,
-&ldquo;This winter of the year 1510 I look to finish all this
-anatomy.&rdquo; And yet, however sincerely he might express
-such a wish, Leonardo was a person who was literally
-never &ldquo;finished.&rdquo; The scientific and artistic tasks he had
-chosen for himself were clearly beyond the limits of any
-one man. Besides, the pressures of the outside world
-were once more threatening the peace and quiet of his
-home and work.</p>
-<p>Pope Julius II became increasingly fearful of the
-French victories over the Venetians. Secretly, he concluded
-a peace with Venice and, allying himself with
-his former enemy, he now turned against the French.
-When the conflict continued, Charles d&rsquo;Amboise, the
-patron of Leonardo, was killed at the battle of Correggio.
-He was replaced by a new French Viceroy, Gaston
-de Foix. Although the Pope now hired Swiss mercenaries,
-this invasion from the North was defeated by the
-young Gaston. Not to be outdone, the Pope then
-brought in Spanish troops.</p>
-<p>In the ensuing bloody battle at Ravenna, the French
-completely defeated the armies of the Pope and Spain,
-despite their use of battle-cars armed with razor-sharp
-sickles on their wheels&mdash;strangely like the early inventions
-that Leonardo designed for Lorenzo de&rsquo; Medici!
-Although the French were victorious, they lost their
-brilliant young leader, Gaston de Foix, and with him
-they lost their heart. As a result, they were soon disorganized.
-The Pope&rsquo;s armies renewed their attacks,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_128">128</span>
-and the French began a long retreat.</p>
-<p>Once again the plague infested Milan and Leonardo&rsquo;s
-friend, Marcantonio della Torre, died of it. After some
-futile attempts at recovery, the French fled across the
-Alps and with them went Marshal Trivulzio. Milan was
-left temporarily under the martial rule of the Swiss,
-and Leonardo with only his few apprentices was left
-again without a patron.</p>
-<p>Tired and prematurely old at sixty-one, Leonardo resignedly
-gathered his possessions together once more
-and with Francesco de&rsquo; Melzi and four of his loyal pupils,
-he turned his back on Milan for the last time. The date
-was September 29, 1513. Their destination was Rome.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_129">129</div>
-<h2 id="c12"><span class="small">12</span>
-<br /><i>Rome</i></h2>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/chapter.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="49" />
-</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Name?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Leonardo da Vinci.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where from and where are you staying?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We are coming from Milan by way of Florence. I
-have quarters being prepared for me at the Belvedere in
-the Vatican&mdash;by order of the Pope. Now, young man,
-let us pass.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The guard at the Porta del Popolo changed his manner.
-He dropped his halberd and motioned to the other
-guards to let the riders through. He touched his helmet
-roughly and with a grin he said,</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry, Sire&mdash;but you know how it is. All these
-<span class="pb" id="Page_130">130</span>
-people&mdash;there&rsquo;s bound to be them that we don&rsquo;t want
-here. Go ahead, your Excellency. Make way there!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>With these words he laid his spear against a jostling
-group of broad-hatted pilgrims blocking the entrance
-to the city of Rome.</p>
-<p>Leonardo heeled his horse and with Francesco de&rsquo;
-Melzi at his side, followed by his servant and students,
-pushed past the crowd at the gate. To the left rose the
-Pincio hill with its stately pines where, in the days of
-Imperial Rome, Lucullus had walked in his gardens.
-But Leonardo had no time to look about. It was a damp
-December day, and rain threatened from the gray skies.
-He was tired, and as Francesco glanced at him he could
-see Leonardo pull his cape around him with a little
-shiver as the chill wind stirred the long, graying hair
-on his shoulders. They made their way through the
-crowded, noisy city. They crossed the Tiber and rode
-past Castel&rsquo; Sant&rsquo; Angelo, the papal fortress built on the
-tomb of Emperor Hadrian. After another inspection
-by the Swiss guards in beribboned uniforms of white,
-green and gold under their shining breastplates, they
-entered the walls of the Vatican. That evening after
-he had settled himself in the Belvedere apartments and
-dinner had been eaten, Leonardo, gazing into the embers
-of the fire, looked back over his new stroke of fortune.</p>
-<p>The Medicis had returned to power. Pope Julius II
-<span class="pb" id="Page_131">131</span>
-had died, and Giovanni de&rsquo; Medici, son of Lorenzo, had
-become Pope Leo X at the age of thirty-seven. With
-his election to the head of the Christian world, the Republic
-of Florence became a city of the Medicis once
-more and Leonardo had received an appointment in
-Rome. Giuliano de&rsquo; Medici, Pope Leo&rsquo;s favorite younger
-brother, in his new rise to power and wealth, became
-Leonardo&rsquo;s patron. The two must have met sometime
-during the Medici&rsquo;s exile. Leonardo was given the apartments
-in the Vatican and a salary of thirty-three ducats
-(approximately eighty-five dollars) a month and a
-workshop was fitted for him and his pupils. He was also
-assigned an exclusive German assistant named Georg.</p>
-<p>The Pope&rsquo;s court in the Vatican was like the Medici
-court in the Florence of Leonardo&rsquo;s youth&mdash;multiplied
-by hundreds. Leo X saw himself as the center of the
-artistic world, and being a man of luxurious tastes with
-the wealth of the church behind him, the Vatican was
-soon filled with a mixture of the wise and foolish. Pompous
-classic-quoters, third-rate poets and clowns mixed
-with the world&rsquo;s scholars and statesmen. The two greatest
-artists were Bramante, the architect and friend of
-Leonardo&rsquo;s first years in Milan, and Bramante&rsquo;s pupil
-Raphael, the painter.</p>
-<p>Bramante was busy building the new church of St.
-Peter&rsquo;s and, as the architect of this favorite project of
-the Popes, he was sole master of the Roman art world.
-Raphael, as his protege, was the recipient of the better
-painting commissions in Rome. The elderly Bramante
-and the thirty-year-old assistant were a famous pair in
-the Rome of 1513. Equally as famous, however, was
-Michelangelo; he was still living in Rome, but was without
-patronage after Julius II&rsquo;s death. Leonardo&rsquo;s old
-rival had scored his triumph with his extraordinary paintings
-in the Sistine Chapel.</p>
-<p>Although the young Raphael, who owed so much to
-<span class="pb" id="Page_132">132</span>
-the example of Leonardo, now rode through the streets
-as a wealthy nobleman, Leonardo himself received no
-great commissions. While Pope Leo was indulgent of
-his brother&rsquo;s whims he himself had no use for this tall,
-serious old man who roamed the shaded walks of the
-Vatican poking at the strange plants in the botanical
-garden or making drawings of the foreign animals in the
-private zoo. In reality, Leonardo&rsquo;s patron, Giuliano de&rsquo;
-Medici was a weak man. He played at being a patron
-but, like his brother the Pope, he lacked the force and
-decision of his famous father Lorenzo. Nevertheless,
-he did give Leonardo one small commission for a picture.
-Immediately Leonardo, excited by the exotic plants in
-the Vatican gardens, commenced to experiment with
-them to find a resin to make a varnish with which to
-cover the future painting. Pope Leo made fun of him
-exclaiming, to the delight of his court, &ldquo;This man will
-never get anything done, he thinks of the end before
-the beginning.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This ridicule by the Pope made Leonardo a joke to
-many in the circles of the Vatican who were a little
-afraid of this strange man with the searching eyes. Leonardo
-also suffered the humiliations of a man who did
-not conform to the fashions of his day. His knowledge
-of Latin, for example, was weak and although he could
-read it with the help of a dictionary he could not speak
-it. And, among the people who surrounded the Pope,
-Latin was the only language allowed. Prizes of great
-sums of money and important positions were often
-granted on the strength of an improvised speech in
-Latin (with many quotations from the classical authors)
-or a flattering Latin verse. Faced with such setbacks and
-ridicule, Leonardo&mdash;not surprisingly&mdash;began to withdraw
-into himself.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_133">133</div>
-<p>And yet, Leonardo refused to remain idle&mdash;he had
-to work. The need for mirrors in the vast halls and rooms
-of the papal palace was great. Leonardo turned his
-mechanical skill to redesigning and improving methods
-of making them, and even inventing his own machines
-for the grinding of the glass. Also, for Giuliano, who
-dabbled in alchemy and magic, he made distorting mirrors
-and burning lenses. In addition, Leonardo invented
-a machine which could be run hydraulically for producing
-long strips of copper of equal width for use in soldering
-the mirrors.</p>
-<p>But, with the making of these mirrors, Leonardo began
-to run into trouble with his German assistant, Georg.
-The boy was a loafer; he spoke little Italian and took
-every opportunity to spend his days with his countrymen
-in the Swiss guard. Leonardo tried to alter the situation
-by suggesting that the boy have his meals with him
-at his worktable, thus giving Georg a better chance to
-learn the language. This however did not appeal to him.
-Then, because Leonardo&rsquo;s inventions were so extraordinary,
-he began to give away the secrets of their mechanisms
-to Johannes the mirror-maker, another German,
-who had been replaced by Leonardo in the favors of
-Giuliano. This naturally made Johannes jealous of Leonardo.
-Georg gossiped, too, and told stories about the
-old, eccentric man who lived like a miser in the midst of
-all the luxury and who drew crazy circles on pages of
-paper.</p>
-<p>These &ldquo;crazy circles&rdquo; were geometric exercises that
-<span class="pb" id="Page_134">134</span>
-had fascinated Leonardo from the time he had wandered
-across Italy with Fra Luca Pacioli. Pacioli&rsquo;s book <i>De
-Divina Proportione</i>, containing sixty illustrations from
-designs of Leonardo, had been published in Venice in
-1509. Leonardo intended to entitle these geometric exercises
-<i>De Ludo Geometrico</i>. In geometry a lune is a
-crescent-shaped figure bounded by two intersecting
-arcs of circles on a plane or a sphere. Leonardo drew
-pages of these lunes and then proceeded to transform
-their curvilinear figures into squares of equal area. He
-also reviewed Archimedes&rsquo; method of squaring a circle
-and developed it into a variety of ways for cubing
-spheres and cylinders.</p>
-<p>He returned as well to formulating theories of friction.
-He wrote in his notes, &ldquo;the tallest wheel is the easiest
-to pull&rdquo;&mdash;for example, a big wheel turning at the same
-speed as a smaller one has less friction to overcome because
-it makes less revolutions. His experiments in friction
-predated men like Amontons and Coulomb by two
-and three centuries. He established a formula for the
-building arch which he described as &ldquo;a strength caused
-by two weaknesses&rdquo;&mdash;if one half of an arch is removed,
-the other half collapses. They support and give strength
-to each other. In addition, Leonardo determined, before
-Galileo, the center of gravity of any pyramid and of a
-tetrahedral, or four-sided body.</p>
-<p>As the days went by and he waited for commissions
-to come, Leonardo took to wandering about the streets
-of Rome. He stood in the half-buried Forum of the
-Caesars surrounded by grazing sheep and grunting pigs.
-Wooden shacks where crude cartwheels were made and
-where the marble from the ancient temples was cut and
-sold, were built against the sides of crumbling ruins.
-The old triumphal arches, now overgrown with creepers,
-were boarded into towers and cattle were penned
-<span class="pb" id="Page_135">135</span>
-between the shafts of columns that once supported the
-grandeur of temple roofs. Here and there a classical
-scholar would be sketching or writing from the worn,
-Latin inscriptions on a marble slab tilted crazily from the
-ground where it had fallen hundreds of years ago.
-Goats wandered on the Palatine hill, once the home of
-Emperors, and the great baths of the Emperor Diocletian
-were now a deer park and a hunting ground for royalty.</p>
-<p>During the course of these wanderings, Leonardo became
-interested in the primitive methods of carpentry.
-Such things as screws, for example, were rare. Those
-that were used were either made of wood or, if of metal,
-by goldsmiths laboriously making each one by hand,
-soldering wire around a pin and another wire into the
-hole to hold the screw. Sometimes they were made by
-filing pieces of metal individually. All these methods
-were time-consuming and costly.</p>
-<p>Leonardo had thought of this problem before, and
-now he concentrated on perfecting his ideas about it.
-Previously, he had thought of casting the metal in
-wooden molds and then turning the metal on thread-cutters.
-The designs he finally drew in careful detail,
-however, are essentially the methods used today. The
-new machines did with a few turns of a handle and
-adjustments of a few cogged wheels what it took one
-man many hours to perform. He also drew designs for
-a mechanical plane and a machine for drawing wire that
-worked by water power.</p>
-<p>Leonardo now lived and worked in the Belvedere of
-the Vatican&mdash;more a man on exhibition than an active
-participant in the great artistic activities taking place
-around him. True, he received his thirty-three ducats
-a month, but Michelangelo had been paid three thousand
-for his work in the Sistine Chapel, while Raphael had
-earned twelve thousand for each room he painted in the
-Vatican.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_136">136</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig16">
-<img src="images/pg075.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="797" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Leonardo became interested in various methods of carpentry.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_137">137</div>
-<p>Thus Leonardo drifted farther and farther away from
-his painting. This, in itself, caused people to talk in the
-papal city. For he had earned fame as a painter, but his
-passion for science was regarded as strange and whimsical.
-Occasionally, he did receive a small commission
-from the workshop of Raphael, yet these were like the
-crumbs from a rich man&rsquo;s table.</p>
-<p>Even the toys Leonardo made at this period for the
-amusement of his patrons were looked upon as somewhat
-weird. For example, he would take small pieces
-of wax and mold them into strange little animals and
-then inflate them so that they floated in the air in front of
-a startled guest. Once he caught a curious lizard in the
-garden and spent hours putting scales all over the tiny
-body, attached to it a little beard and horns, then let
-it out from a box at a banquet. The guests jumped back
-with fear and the women became hysterical.</p>
-<p>One of Leonardo&rsquo;s jokes that has been passed down
-in accounts of his life at this period must have created
-quite a sensation. He showed the company the cleaned
-entrails of a sheep resting on the palm of his hand. After
-telling them to wait and watch he took the entrails in
-another room and with a bellows inflated them with
-warm air. As the entrails filled with air they expanded
-and extended. They crept into the room where the company
-waited. Slowly they grew and grew until they began
-to fill the room. The guests overturned their chairs
-in their hurry to get out of the way of this shapeless,
-translucent creature. Then Leonardo appeared, the air-filled
-<span class="pb" id="Page_138">138</span>
-entrails giving way before him, and said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sires, this is but an example and symbol of virtue.
-As you can see, the smallest virtue is capable of the
-greatest growth.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The guests laughed, but it was an uncomfortable
-laugh. Thus another story was added to the legend of
-Leonardo as an odd old man.</p>
-<p>Leonardo, whose work&mdash;particularly his anatomical
-studies&mdash;had constantly been interrupted by the fortunes
-of war, had found another hospital in Rome where he
-could continue these studies. This time it was his intention
-to write a treatise on speech. He dissected and
-drew the anatomy of the larynx (the voice box), the
-vocal cords and the trachea (the air passage to the lungs),
-and all the muscles that control the movements of the
-tongue and the lips. If you pronounce each letter of the
-alphabet you will feel these muscles of the lips, especially
-with the letters &ldquo;o,&rdquo; &ldquo;p,&rdquo; and &ldquo;f.&rdquo; Carefully he noted
-how the air vibrations from the trachea form themselves
-into vowels and consonants, and he drew the membrane
-which, when air is pressed against it, makes the sound
-&ldquo;aah.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At this same time he was also busy finishing a treatise
-on painting which he had begun when he was working
-on the &ldquo;Last Supper&rdquo; for Ludovico Sforza. But it was
-for his knowledge of military engineering that he was
-sent to the city of Parma by the Pope on September 25,
-1514. Here he stayed at the Bell Inn while examining the
-fortifications and other defenses of the city.</p>
-<p>Leonardo&rsquo;s patron, Giuliano de&rsquo; Medici, had been
-<span class="pb" id="Page_139">139</span>
-appointed governor of this particular area and, since
-Pope Leo X was fearful of two powerful countries,
-France and Spain, he was preparing the papal territory
-against possible invasion. Another fear of the Pope&mdash;and
-indeed of everybody in Rome&mdash;was malaria, the
-disease carried by the mosquitoes that bred in the Pontine
-marshes west and southwest of the city. At that
-time, however, no one knew the cause was mosquitoes;
-rather, they thought it was the bad air from the
-marshes.</p>
-<p>As Leonardo had already been effective in draining
-the pestilential marshes of Piombino for Cesare Borgia
-and, later, those around Milan for Charles d&rsquo;Amboise,
-he was assigned the same task for the Pontine marshes.
-He surveyed the entire area to the sea and made another
-extraordinary aerial type map. His recommendations
-included draining the entire area, enlarging and regulating
-the Martino river and cutting an extra outlet from
-the river Livoli to the sea. These plans were adopted
-some years later and parts of the marshes were drained
-successfully, yielding new land for the cultivation of
-crops.</p>
-<p>By December of 1514 Leonardo had finished his
-treatise on speech and, possibly in an effort to attract the
-attention of the Pope, he submitted it to the Privy-Chamberlain,
-Battista dell&rsquo;Aquila. As Pope Leo was surrounded
-by an army of secretaries and assistants who
-passed on everything submitted, this manuscript with its
-beautiful drawings was mislaid and lost and only a few
-notes and sketches remain.</p>
-<p>The continual discouragement of his life in Rome was
-<span class="pb" id="Page_140">140</span>
-offset by a visit from his half-brother, Giuliano, around
-Christmas. Leonardo was held in esteem by his family
-despite the quarrel over his father&rsquo;s and his uncle Francesco&rsquo;s
-will, and his half-brothers were pleased to tell
-of their famous relative who lived in the Belvedere as
-guest of the Medicis. Yet they knew little of Leonardo&rsquo;s
-scientific dreams and his lack of recognition in the papal
-city.</p>
-<p>Often, Leonardo&rsquo;s greatest comfort was to return to
-his notes. The challenge of geometry and the mysteries
-of the movement of air and water kept him from brooding
-about his lonely life. Francesco de&rsquo; Melzi, Leonardo&rsquo;s
-young friend, had more and more taken over
-the practical responsibilities of his everyday life. Except
-for his workshop, where the troublesome Georg
-worked at the making of mirrors, and an occasional
-small commission for a painting, Leonardo was free to
-study.</p>
-<p>In addition to his geometrical investigations, Leonardo
-now experimented with the science of <i>statics</i> (objects
-that are stationary), and <i>dynamics</i> (objects in motion).
-One of his most important discoveries in the
-science of mechanics came about during this period.
-Concerning the division of weight, he wrote, &ldquo;There
-are three conditions of gravity of which the one is its
-simple natural gravity, the second is its accidental gravity,
-the third the friction produced by it. But the natural
-weight is in itself unchangeable, the accidental which
-is joined to it is of infinite force, and the friction varies
-according to the places wherein it occurs, namely rough
-or smooth places.&rdquo; Thus he realized and formulated
-what composes the movement of an object. He found
-that movement is the result of separate forces acting
-upon the object from different directions, as for example,
-the initial push, the pull of gravity and the
-resistance of friction. And, before Galileo, Leonardo
-further experimented with objects dropped from a
-height. As the result of repeated experiments, he noted
-that the fall was being affected by the earth&rsquo;s rotation.
-That is, the object dropped always fell in a slight eastward
-direction rather than vertically downward&mdash;a
-fact later proved conclusively by Isaac Newton and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_141">141</span>
-Robert Hooke in the next century.</p>
-<p>He also became fascinated with spiral motion, such
-as is found in a spinning top or in a whirlpool of water.
-Because of his interest in <i>hydrodynamics</i>, or the movement
-of water, he began to sketch imaginary &ldquo;Deluge
-compositions.&rdquo; These were drawings showing the
-world&mdash;probably inspired by the Bible&mdash;in a chaos of
-wind and floods. They were based on his years of scientific
-research. Indeed, his drawings of actual whirlpools
-are still among the greatest of his scientific art. Today,
-with all the latest technical aids, such as dusting a whirlpool
-with powdered rosin and then photographing it, an
-accurate three-dimensional picture is impossible. Yet
-Leonardo, by sheer observation and analysis coupled
-with his genius for drawing, could reproduce the complicated
-shape of whirling water.</p>
-<p>In the relatedness of his explorations of water, air and
-movement, and weight, he worked out the similarity
-between the laws of equilibrium controlling solids and
-liquids. The equation between the motive force and
-resistance that makes for equilibrium or balance in solids
-can be compared to the equation between the upward
-pressure of liquids and the downward pressure exerted
-on them.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_142">142</div>
-<p>Far into the night Leonardo worked on his papers.
-He tired more easily now, and his eyes had grown
-weaker. To provide the increase in light that his failing
-eyesight demanded, he had improved on his original oil
-lamp by making the wick rise as the oil was burned
-away, and he had extra lamps fitted to the ceiling.</p>
-<p>On January 9, 1515 Leonardo wrote in his notes, &ldquo;Il
-Magnifico Giuliano de&rsquo; Medici set out on the ninth day
-of January 1515 at daybreak from Rome, to go and
-marry a wife in Savoy. And on that day came the news
-of the death of the King of France (Louis XII).&rdquo; This
-meant that his new patron had left and his old patron
-had died. Leonardo&rsquo;s note was a sad one and perhaps
-he felt, in the departure of his patron, more alone than
-ever in the crowded life of the Vatican. Giuliano, on the
-urging of his brother, was marrying Philiberta of Savoy,
-in an effort to strengthen the prestige of the Medici.
-Louis XII, before he died, had formed a league against
-Spain, and with the marriage of the Pope&rsquo;s brother to a
-noble house of France, the league would be strengthened
-by keeping the Pope on the side of France. Actually
-Pope Leo was playing both sides, for at the time
-he was also friendly with Spain.</p>
-<p class="tb">Shortly after Giuliano&rsquo;s departure from Rome, Leonardo
-fell ill, presumably from a mild heart attack complicated
-by a touch of malarial fever. The doctor had
-been called. It was a warning, the doctor told Francesco
-de&rsquo; Melzi, and Leonardo must remain quiet for quite
-awhile.</p>
-<p>By the end of the winter Leonardo was back on his
-feet and apparently feeling completely well again.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_143">143</span>
-Giuliano himself had fallen ill about the same time and
-the news that he had recovered and was finally returning
-to Rome cheered Leonardo. He sat down and wrote
-a long letter to his patron expressing his joy. This letter
-also included a long list of complaints against Georg
-and Johannes. Georg was now using his room in Leonardo&rsquo;s
-apartment to do work for others. He lied to
-Leonardo and flew into such a rage when he was questioned
-that no one could go near him. Moreover,
-Johannes, the mirror-maker, was now moving back
-into the Vatican and turning out mirrors for everyone,
-even using Georg&rsquo;s room as his own workroom.
-Johannes boasted of his skill and told everybody that
-Leonardo did not know what he was doing. Thus, it
-was not surprising that Leonardo, in his long complaint,
-was taking out the anger and frustration he felt against
-all the injustices of his life in Rome.</p>
-<p>But by summer Leonardo was again employed as a
-military engineer. Francis I had succeeded to the throne
-of France. The new French King was anxious to secure
-his lost title to the Dukedom of Milan and was preparing
-another invasion of Italy. Pope Leo X, still trying to
-play both sides at once, was making secret agreements
-with Francis while at the same time joining the King of
-Spain, Milan, Genoa, and the Swiss in an alliance against
-France. Consequently, he sent Leonardo out to inspect
-the fortifications of Civitavecchia, a city on the Tyrrhenian
-coast not too far from Rome. When, in August,
-Francis I crossed into Italy with an army of thirty-five
-thousand men including Marshal Trivulzio, the Pope
-ordered his brother, Giuliano, to take command of the
-papal forces. On the way to assume this command,
-Giuliano fell ill and collapsed. His sickness this time was
-<span class="pb" id="Page_144">144</span>
-soon to be fatal.</p>
-<p>Leonardo returned to Rome with his survey of
-Civitavecchia, where he immediately learned of his
-patron&rsquo;s latest illness. Perhaps realizing that Giuliano
-was fatally ill, Leonardo made a desperate effort to gain
-the recognition he felt should be his. He entered the
-competition for a new fa&ccedil;ade of San Lorenzo in Florence.
-Among the other competitors was Michelangelo,
-his younger and yet oldest rival.</p>
-<p>In October of 1515, Francis I had recaptured Milan
-and by Christmas was in Rome. Leonardo may have met
-the new King of France in Bologna where Pope Leo X
-had personally traveled in order to settle a peace treaty
-with France. Certainly it is known that he attended
-Francis&rsquo; court in Rome. Leonardo&rsquo;s name was well respected
-in French circles and, as Francis had already
-admired the pictures by Leonardo, the meeting was a
-happy occasion for them both. Indeed, the recognition
-that Leonardo had sought in his native land was never
-as great as that accorded to him by the French.</p>
-<p>As Francis I prepared to leave for France in January
-he must have offered Leonardo a position at his court.
-While he still hoped that Giuliano de&rsquo; Medici would
-recover from his illness and return to Rome, Francis&rsquo;
-offer gave him support in the knowledge that he had a
-powerful, new friend.</p>
-<p>March of 1516 brought the first of three events that
-<span class="pb" id="Page_145">145</span>
-were to change the course of Leonardo&rsquo;s last years.
-Giuliano de&rsquo; Medici died, leaving Leonardo not only
-without a patron, but without a friend in the Vatican.
-Now sixty-four years old, he was reluctant to leave his
-comfortable quarters in the Belvedere with its workshop
-and pleasant gardens. Besides, deep within himself, he
-felt that Rome could still offer him the fame that had
-always escaped him.</p>
-<p>Spring ripened into summer and the second event
-occurred. The competition for the new fa&ccedil;ade of San
-Lorenzo in Florence was won by Michelangelo. To
-Leonardo the news was a blow. The success of his old
-rival weakened his position in the Vatican even further
-and added to the growing hostility he had felt in the
-people surrounding the Pope.</p>
-<p>The third event was the sum of many small events.
-Georg and his friend Johannes, in their jealousy, had
-spread much gossip about Leonardo in court circles.
-They now took advantage of Giuliano&rsquo;s death to circulate
-stories about Leonardo&rsquo;s dissections of bodies in
-the hospital. These were added to vicious gossip that
-Leonardo was pro-French. This news eventually
-reached Pope Leo X. The Pope himself was perfectly
-aware of the practice of dissection and, personally, he
-had turned his eyes the other way. However, as dissection
-was contrary to Church doctrine, an official
-complaint to the head of the Church could not be
-ignored. The Pope used it as an excuse to be rid of this
-tiresome old man whom he had tolerated only for his
-brother&rsquo;s sake. Leonardo was abandoned.</p>
-<p>The year 1516 was drawing to a close. Leonardo had
-<span class="pb" id="Page_146">146</span>
-decided to seek the patronage offered him by Francis
-I. So he and Francesco de&rsquo; Melzi, his loyal young friend,
-left Rome for the long journey into France. As he left
-his native land for the last time, Leonardo looked back
-over his years&mdash;from the silver lute that had sent him
-to Milan, to the death of Giuliano, to the final rejection
-of Pope Leo X. Remembering how Lorenzo de&rsquo; Medici
-had sent him to Ludovico so many years before, Leonardo
-thought to himself with great sadness, &ldquo;The
-Medici created and destroyed me.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_147">147</div>
-<h2 id="c13"><span class="small">13</span>
-<br /><i>The Last Years</i></h2>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/chapter.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="49" />
-</div>
-<p>Leonardo looked around from where he was leaning
-on the parapet of the Chateau d&rsquo;Amboise to watch a
-group of young lords and ladies playing croquet on the
-emerald-green lawn. The click of the mallets and balls
-was mingled with the shouts and laughter of the young
-people. It was late afternoon in May and although the
-sun was warm the breeze from the west was chilly.
-Leonardo looked down again from the sheer height of
-the castle wall across the wide sweep of the Loire river
-and the valley extending as far as the eye could see.
-Swallows were swooping low over the banks below and
-the wind carried their shrilling cries up to him. The
-forested islands and sandbars interrupted the steady
-flow of the river and Leonardo could see the reflections
-sway in the current. He had been studying the river
-but he realized that his aging eyes were not up to the
-task of concentrating for long. The wind made them
-<span class="pb" id="Page_148">148</span>
-water, so he turned away and started back to his home.</p>
-<p>There was much that was familiar in the castle at
-Amboise. The thick, high walls and round towers and
-especially the graceful, lacy spires of the king&rsquo;s residence
-brought back much that he had known in his native
-land. The gardens had been planted by Italians&mdash;there
-were orange trees and even a mulberry tree from his
-beloved plains of Lombardy. The king&rsquo;s residence and
-chapel had been constructed and the decorations carved
-in stone by Italian artisans. Leonardo could stop and
-talk in his native tongue with many of the men employed
-by the king. Since the time of Charles VIII, the
-French had brought in the latest Renaissance styles
-from Italy. Leonardo&rsquo;s steps took him back from the
-castle grounds and down a path with a hand-railing. The
-steep roofs of the town of Amboise with their chimneys
-could be seen below him. The path led to a small
-manor house, like a miniature castle with sharp spires
-and lacy, carved-stone gables that was set in green lawns
-and gravel paths.</p>
-<p>The Manoir de Cloux, as Leonardo&rsquo;s house was
-called, had been a hunting lodge for Francis I, but when
-Leonardo had arrived he gave the house to Leonardo
-for his home. Francis, in his admiration for this great
-man, also gave him seven hundred crowns a year, together
-with a pension of four hundred for Francesco
-de&rsquo; Melzi.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_149">149</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig17">
-<img src="images/pg081.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="810" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Leonardo at Chateau d&rsquo;Amboise on the Loire.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_150">150</div>
-<p>The long journey from Rome had left Leonardo tired
-and weak and he had fallen ill again shortly after his
-arrival. This time the attack was more serious and had
-left him with his right hand permanently crippled. He
-looked at it now as he opened the door to his room.
-&ldquo;Another warning,&rdquo; he thought, &ldquo;and there&rsquo;s still so
-much to do.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The young, robust King Francis was everywhere at
-once. He gloried in knightly tournaments, hunts, and
-sports of all kinds. Always restless, he might appear at
-any place unannounced. Frequently there would be a
-clamor at the gates of Leonardo&rsquo;s home and the king
-would ride in with one or two of his nobles. With a
-great jingling of spurs he would bound up the stairs of
-the manor house calling for Leonardo. He delighted in
-long talks with the old man, and would listen respectfully
-as Leonardo, his deep-set eyes brooding over his
-notes, would demonstrate some scientific point on a
-blank sheet of paper.</p>
-<p>At this time, Leonardo was engaged on three projects
-which demanded his immediate attention. One
-was the entertainment for a banquet that Francis was
-giving for his sister, Marguerite de Valois, and her husband.
-Another was a new design for the king&rsquo;s castle
-at Amboise, and the third was a design for making a
-navigable waterway from Amboise to Romorantin. Although
-these three projects were the main ones that
-occupied Leonardo&rsquo;s time, there was always the supervising
-of his pupils&rsquo; painting on the walls in the little
-chapel of the manor house, his own work on a painting
-of St. John the Baptist, and the continual ordering and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_151">151</span>
-revising of his notes.</p>
-<p>The banquet took place in October of 1517, and the
-mechanical lion Leonardo had made was an immediate
-success. It &ldquo;walked&rdquo; by means of a spring motor, into
-the hall, opening and closing its fierce mouth while
-swaying its head from side to side. With a wand that
-he had been given, Francis I stepped down from his
-seat and tapped the lion three times. The toy fell apart
-and from it a cascade of white lilies poured out at the
-king&rsquo;s feet.</p>
-<p>Also at this time there was a distinguished guest at
-the castle of Amboise. He was a fellow-countryman of
-Leonardo and his name was Cardinal Luigi d&rsquo;Aragona.
-With him was his secretary Antonio de&rsquo; Beatis. As
-Leonardo was now a famous member of King Francis&rsquo;
-court, the cardinal paid him a visit accompanied by
-Antonio. The extraordinary anatomy drawings and all
-his notes were shown to the cardinal; he and his secretary
-were deeply impressed. They were also surprised
-to learn that Leonardo had never been accorded the
-same recognition by his own countrymen. Antonio
-de&rsquo; Beatis wrote home that &ldquo;This gentleman has written
-a treatise on anatomy, showing by illustrations the members,
-muscles, nerves, veins, joints, intestines and whatever
-else is to discuss in the bodies of men and women,
-in a way that has never yet been done by anyone else.
-All this we have seen with our own eyes; and he said
-that he had dissected more than thirty bodies, both of
-men and women of all ages. He has also written of the
-nature of water, and of divers machines, and of other
-matters which he has set down in an endless number of
-volumes, all in the vulgar tongue [meaning Italian not
-Latin], which, if they be published, will be profitable
-<span class="pb" id="Page_152">152</span>
-and delightful.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>By now Leonardo had accumulated thousands of
-pages of notes, and they lay stacked in all manner of
-chests and boxes. Often now, as Leonardo surveyed the
-work of his lifetime, he realized that he would never
-see the day of their publication. Time was slipping
-through his fingers. Already summer had come and
-gone and now the sharp winds of fall were lifting the
-leaves from the ground in dancing whirls. Fortunately
-these were years of peace and for the first time in a
-long while the people were free of wars. The scheme
-to canalize the waterway to Romorantin had grown to
-a vast idea for making a thoroughfare of water from the
-Loire river all the way down France to Lyons and then
-into Italy! Leonardo, old and ailing as he was, had surveyed
-parts of the rivers Loire and Cher, braving the
-rough roads and crude accommodations.</p>
-<p>In addition, Leonardo had designed a castle for Francis
-I&rsquo;s widowed mother in Romorantin. This castle was
-never built, but many of the ideas that Leonardo had
-incorporated in its design were used in the gigantic and
-magnificent castle of Chambord. Also, at Francis&rsquo; request,
-he had reviewed the work being done at the castle
-in Blois and there is reason to think that the beautiful
-outside stairwell that spirals from left to right might
-have been designed by Leonardo.</p>
-<p>In February of 1517, a son had been born to Queen
-<span class="pb" id="Page_153">153</span>
-Claude and Francis I. The king decided to postpone the
-baptism of the dauphin (the title given to the eldest son
-of a French King) until May of the following year. At
-that time there would be a double celebration at Amboise,
-for a nephew of Pope Leo X, the young Lorenzo
-de&rsquo; Medici, was being married to Madelaine d&rsquo;Auvergne.
-As usual, Leonardo was given the assignment
-of preparing the festivities. Although he was fond
-of preparing these entertainments, Leonardo now felt
-the pressure of time; for indeed, the interruptions of this
-eager young king were sometimes a hardship. He felt
-that his years were drawing to an end. His notes were
-unfinished and his dreams of extending man&rsquo;s knowledge
-of his world and of himself were hindered not only by
-such petty chores but also by the limits of his own physical
-endurance.</p>
-<p>As Leonardo was sketching one day from the window
-of his room where he could see the castle walls and
-the chapel of Saint-Hubert, he set aside the drawing
-for a moment to write a memorandum to himself.
-&ldquo;Write of the quality of time as distinct from its
-mathematical divisions.&rdquo; Was this extraordinary man
-sensing the road down which Einstein&mdash;in his studies of
-relativity&mdash;was to travel hundreds of years later?</p>
-<p>Spring arrived again and with it came the first wild
-<span class="pb" id="Page_154">154</span>
-flowers and roses, the songs of the birds in the woods
-and the blossoming of the chestnut trees. The time for
-the double celebration came, too, and Leonardo was
-seen busily preparing the decorations and mechanical
-delights for the large crowds already assembling. In
-addition to the tournaments-at-arms that so delighted
-the king, there was to be a mock battle with a besieged
-city, and for this Leonardo had had constructed imposing
-castle walls of wood with a backdrop of a city&rsquo;s
-spires and towers. The party lasted for weeks, and the
-climax was performed on the lawns of Leonardo&rsquo;s house
-where a great ballroom had been set up. Here he repeated
-an earlier success, the one that had so enchanted
-Ludovico&rsquo;s guests so many years ago in the Sforza castle
-at Milan. There was again a dome over the ballroom
-across which the stars moved mechanically and artificial
-figures representing various gods and goddesses spoke
-and sang by means of a hidden choir, while the sun and
-moon shone in their own lights.</p>
-<p>This display ended the festivities. It was already late
-June and Leonardo was anxious to return to his plans
-for the water route to Italy. There was the area near
-Sologne which, when flooded, would make the surrounding
-countryside a marshland. This would have to
-be drained by the same method as he had planned for
-the Piombino and the Pontine marshes. Francis I was
-interested, too, in the improvements Leonardo had suggested
-for his own castle, and he would have to talk
-with the castle superintendent about them. As always,
-there seemed to be so many things to do, to plan, to
-work on. Then Leonardo wrote in his notes: &ldquo;On the
-24th of June, the day of St. John, 1518, at Amboise, in
-the palace of Cloux....&rdquo; and underneath, &ldquo;I will continue&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;<i>I will continue</i>&mdash;&rdquo; It was almost a note of defiance
-against the obstacles of advancing age and sickness and
-the interruptions of the practical world.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_155">155</div>
-<p class="tb">The sound of jingling spurs and bridle chains and the
-snorting of many horses announced another surprise
-visit from the young king. Leonardo could hear him
-below shouting something to Battista, the servant who
-had come to Amboise with Leonardo. Now, as usual,
-Francis was running up the stairs with all the energy of
-youth shouting for &ldquo;le ma&icirc;tre&rdquo; (the master). Resignedly
-and with patient humor, Leonardo stepped out to greet
-the king. The gold chains around Francis&rsquo; thick neck
-and over his broad chest glinted in the semi-light of the
-hall, and he was holding his plumed hat at his side and
-mopping his forehead with a dainty embroidered handkerchief.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Master Leonardo! We are going on a tour of the
-river and I want you to look at the place that I told you
-about. Where I want to put that bridge. You remember?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, give me but a moment to gather some material
-together.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A chest was made ready and soon Leonardo was at
-the door, calling to Francesco and Battista to help him
-into the saddle of his horse, while the king&rsquo;s servants
-hoisted the chest onto one of the carts already piled
-high with tents and provisions.</p>
-<p>When Francis was restless&mdash;which was often&mdash;a
-&ldquo;tour&rdquo; could mean many hours or many days of travel.
-Wagons were always kept ready with all the equipment
-for a long journey and Leonardo, himself, had learned
-to accept these sudden whims and kept chests of his
-own ready for any such trip. Now, as always, the king
-kept his horse reined back out of regard for this tall,
-stooped man with the long beard and simple clothes.</p>
-<p>Yet when Leonardo returned from this &ldquo;tour&rdquo; he
-<span class="pb" id="Page_156">156</span>
-realized that he could no longer make such trips. The
-hardships of sleeping in tents, riding over the hot roads,
-and the necessary work involved in surveying the possible
-sites for a bridge had left him almost exhausted. He
-had made one suggestion, however, and that was to
-build houses that could be carried and then assembled
-with a few wooden locking devices, then just as quickly
-taken down and moved to the next place. They could
-also be left standing where the country people could
-use them while the court was away. Indeed, such
-structures would seem to be the ancestors of our own
-prefabricated houses.</p>
-<p>The winter of 1519 was a bitter one. When the cold
-fog spread over the valley shrouding the bare trees it
-chilled the big, white-washed rooms of Cloux. The
-wind blew down from the north sending blasts down
-the chimneys and scattering ashes and sparks. Leonardo,
-huddled against the huge fireplace with its roof projecting
-into the room, pulled his black cloak lined in soft
-leather around him and reminded himself to include
-it in his will for Mathurine, the faithful domestic who
-cooked for him and took care of his house.</p>
-<p>The aged Leonardo, who had observed and analyzed
-so much of man and nature, knew now that his own
-days were numbered. When the first, pale sunlight of
-March shone through the small leaded-glass windows of
-his house, he applied to the king for permission to make
-out his own will. French law demanded that the property
-of any foreigner dying in France went to the
-Crown. The permission was granted, and on April 23,
-1519, Guillaume Boureau, the Royal Notary of Amboise
-was summoned with witnesses.</p>
-<p>To his half-brothers in Florence Leonardo left his
-<span class="pb" id="Page_157">157</span>
-property at Fiesole and four hundred ducats. To his
-faithful friend and companion, Francesco de&rsquo; Melzi,
-nobleman of Milan, Leonardo willed his notes, drawings,
-and paintings. Battista was given the income that
-Louis XII had granted Leonardo from the tolls of the
-canal at San Cristoforo near Milan. Mathurine was
-granted the &ldquo;good black cloth, trimmed with leather&rdquo;
-and two ducats. Moreover, Leonardo outlined in detail
-the plans for his own funeral, right down to the use of
-ten pounds of candles.</p>
-<p>Too weak now to stand any more, Leonardo was
-confined to his big four-poster bed with the canopy.
-From it he could see the tracery of the Chapel of Saint-Hubert
-against the pale, foreign sky through the little
-window in the corner. The vicar of the church of
-Saint-Denis was called, with two priests and two Franciscan
-friars, and Leonardo received the last sacraments
-at his bedside.</p>
-<p>An entry in his notes reads, &ldquo;While I thought I was
-learning to live, I have been learning how to die.&rdquo; But
-death was not easy for him. With tears rolling down his
-sunken cheeks for &ldquo;his wasted life,&rdquo; he died on May 2,
-1519&mdash;fighting even this final interruption to all his
-work.</p>
-<p>King Francis I, who was at St. Germain-en-Laye
-<span class="pb" id="Page_158">158</span>
-with his court, wept when the news was brought to
-him. Francesco de&rsquo; Melzi was so overcome with grief
-that he waited until June before writing to the half-brothers
-of Leonardo of the Master&rsquo;s death. He wrote,
-in part, &ldquo;He was to me the best of fathers, and it is
-impossible for me to express the grief that his death has
-caused me. Until the day when my body is laid under
-the ground, I shall experience perpetual sorrow, and not
-without reason, for he daily showed me the most devoted
-and warmest affection.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>And in a closing paragraph Francesco added these
-words: &ldquo;His loss is a grief to everyone, for it is not in
-the power of nature to reproduce another such man.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_159">159</div>
-<h2 id="c14"><span class="small">14</span>
-<br /><i>Mankind&rsquo;s Debt to Leonardo</i></h2>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/chapter.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="49" />
-</div>
-<p>When Leonardo died his notebooks began their separate
-journeys into obscurity. They traveled to different lands
-and became parts of widely disparate collections. It
-has only been within the last fifty years that efforts were
-made to bring them all together between the covers of
-one volume&mdash;a dream that Leonardo himself entertained
-but never realized. As the manuscripts and drawings
-were brought to light, translated and published, the
-extraordinary scope of Leonardo&rsquo;s scientific explorations
-was revealed.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_160">160</div>
-<p>Mathematician, anatomist, botanist, astronomer and
-geologist form only part of the long list of his accomplishments
-and give the clue to the man who considered
-all the natural world within his province of study.
-Because of the universality of Leonardo&rsquo;s scientific
-thought he has been frequently mentioned as the forerunner
-of such men as Galileo Galilei, Sir Isaac Newton,
-James Watt, Francis Bacon and William Harvey.
-Although Leonardo cannot be credited with the actual
-discoveries that these men made, his methods of investigation
-pointed the way down the paths that they would
-follow.</p>
-<p>The key to Leonardo&rsquo;s methods lies in a quotation
-from his notes on vision. He wrote of vision as <i>saper
-vedere</i>&mdash;&ldquo;to know how to see&rdquo;&mdash;and he referred to the
-eye as &ldquo;the window of the soul.&rdquo; Again and again, he
-stressed the importance of observation and personal experience.
-Although he himself was well read, he emphasized
-that &ldquo;science comes by observation not by
-authority.&rdquo; His supreme talent for drawing underlines
-his credo and is inseparable from his science. What he
-saw in the natural world about him needed investigating.
-The results of these investigations were transformed
-into drawings as the most certain method for passing
-this knowledge along to others. The best example of
-this attitude is represented by his anatomical studies.
-To merely draw the living figure in front of him was
-not sufficient&mdash;it was imperative to know what he was
-drawing. He turned to the dissecting room and after
-intensive study produced some of the finest anatomical
-drawings in the world&mdash;and among the easiest for others
-to understand.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_161">161</div>
-<p>What Walter Pater wrote of the Renaissance&mdash;&ldquo;in
-many things great rather by what it designed or aspired
-to than by what it actually achieved&rdquo;&mdash;could be a
-summation of Leonardo&rsquo;s own lifetime of effort in
-science. He labored to bring mankind from the morass
-of medieval superstitions onto the firm ground of natural
-facts. With an insatiable curiosity Leonardo attempted
-the impossible task of encompassing all knowledge. Thus
-he established his right to immortality&mdash;for it was an
-attempt that shone like a beacon in a world dark with
-ignorance.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_162">162</div>
-<h2 id="c15"><span class="small"><i>Significant Dates in Leonardo&rsquo;s Life</i></span></h2>
-<table class="center" summary="">
-<tr><td class="r">1452 </td><td class="l">April 15. Birth of Leonardo.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1467 </td><td class="l">Commences apprenticeship with Verrochio in Florence.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1478 </td><td class="l">Commissioned for altarpiece in the Palace of the Signoria.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1481 </td><td class="l">Commissioned to paint an altarpiece for Convent of San Donato.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1482-83(?) </td><td class="l">Leonardo leaves Florence for the court of Ludovico Sforza in Milan.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1483 </td><td class="l">Begins equestrian monument of Francesco Sforza for Ludovico.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1484-86 </td><td class="l">Plague in Milan.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1490 </td><td class="l">April 23. Recommences equestrian monument and starts book on light and shade.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1496 </td><td class="l">Meets with Fra Luca Pacioli, professor of mathematics.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1498 </td><td class="l"><i>The Last Supper</i> completed.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1499 </td><td class="l">Apr. Land awarded to Leonardo near Porta Vercellina. Oct. French occupy Milan. Dec. Leonardo leaves Milan with Pacioli.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1500 </td><td class="l">Leonardo arrives in Mantua. Travels to Venice and returns to Florence.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1502 </td><td class="l">In the service of Cesare Borgia.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1503 </td><td class="l">Returns to Florence, commences work on a canal to sea.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1504 </td><td class="l">Begins the painting of battle of Anghiari. Father dies. Attempt at flight (?).</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1506 </td><td class="l">May. Leaves Florence for Milan at summons of Charles d&rsquo;Amboise, French military governor.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1507 </td><td class="l">Sept. Goes to Florence to settle father&rsquo;s will.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1508 </td><td class="l">July. Returns to Milan.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1511 </td><td class="l">Works with Marc Antonio della Torre on anatomical research.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1512 </td><td class="l">French lose Milan.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1513 </td><td class="l">Leonardo leaves Milan for Rome. Serves Giuliano de&rsquo; Medici, brother of Pope Leo X.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1516 </td><td class="l">Leonardo leaves Rome for France to serve King Francis I.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="r">1519 </td><td class="l">May 2. Death of Leonardo.</td></tr>
-</table>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_164">164</div>
-<h2 id="c16"><span class="small"><i>Index</i></span></h2>
-<p class="center"><a href="#index_A" class="ab">A</a> <a href="#index_B" class="ab">B</a> <a href="#index_C" class="ab">C</a> <a href="#index_D" class="ab">D</a> <a href="#index_E" class="ab">E</a> <a href="#index_F" class="ab">F</a> <a href="#index_G" class="ab">G</a> <a href="#index_H" class="ab">H</a> <a href="#index_I" class="ab">I</a> <a href="#index_J" class="ab">J</a> <a href="#index_K" class="ab">K</a> <a href="#index_L" class="ab">L</a> <a href="#index_M" class="ab">M</a> <a href="#index_N" class="ab">N</a> <a href="#index_O" class="ab">O</a> <a href="#index_P" class="ab">P</a> <a href="#index_Q" class="ab">Q</a> <a href="#index_R" class="ab">R</a> <a href="#index_S" class="ab">S</a> <a href="#index_T" class="ab">T</a> <a href="#index_U" class="ab">U</a> <a href="#index_V" class="ab">V</a> <a href="#index_W" class="ab">W</a> <span class="ab">X</span> <a href="#index_Y" class="ab">Y</a> <span class="ab">Z</span></p>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_A"><b>A</b></dt>
-<dt>Abbaco, Benedetto dell&rsquo;, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></dt>
-<dt>Adda river, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></dt>
-<dt>&ldquo;Adoration of the Magi,&rdquo; <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></dt>
-<dt>Adriatic, the, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></dt>
-<dt>&ldquo;Air conditioner,&rdquo; <a href="#Page_69">69</a></dt>
-<dt>Air, study of, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a></dt>
-<dt>&ldquo;Alarm clock,&rdquo; <a href="#Page_57">57</a></dt>
-<dt>Albert of Saxony, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></dt>
-<dt>Alessandria, fortress of, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></dt>
-<dt>Alfonso of Calabria, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></dt>
-<dt>Alps, the, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></dt>
-<dt>Amadeo, Antonio, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></dt>
-<dt>Amadori, Albiera di Giovanni, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></dt>
-<dt>Amadori, Alessandro, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></dt>
-<dt>Amboise, <i>see</i> Chateau d&rsquo;Amboise</dt>
-<dt>Amontons, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></dt>
-<dt>Anatomy, human, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>-127, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></dt>
-<dt>Anchiano, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></dt>
-<dt>Anemometer, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></dt>
-<dt>Anemoscope, <a href="#Page_65">65</a></dt>
-<dt>Anghiari, battle of, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></dt>
-<dt>Aquadello, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></dt>
-<dt>Aquila, Battista dell&rsquo;, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></dt>
-<dt>Arabs, the, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></dt>
-<dt>Archimedes, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></dt>
-<dt>Architecture, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></dt>
-<dt>Argyropoulos, John, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></dt>
-<dt>Aristotle, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></dt>
-<dt>Arithmetic, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></dt>
-<dt>Arithmetico, Benedetto, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></dt>
-<dt>Armored vehicle, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></dt>
-<dt>Arno river, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>-106, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></dt>
-<dt>Arrezzo, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></dt>
-<dt>Ascanio, Cardinal, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></dt>
-<dt>Astronomy, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>-82, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></dt>
-<dt>Atlantic Ocean, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></dt>
-<dt>&ldquo;Automobile,&rdquo; <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></dt>
-<dt>Autopsies, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></dt>
-<dt>Avicenna, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_B"><b>B</b></dt>
-<dt>Bacon, Francis, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></dt>
-<dt>Bacon, Roger, <a href="#Page_120">120</a></dt>
-<dt>Badia, the, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></dt>
-<dt>Battista, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></dt>
-<dt>Bayzid II, <a href="#Page_94">94</a></dt>
-<dt>Beatis, Antonio de&rsquo;, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></dt>
-<dt>Bianca Maria, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></dt>
-<dt>Bible, the, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></dt>
-<dt>Birds, flight of, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></dt>
-<dt>Black Death, <i>see</i> Bubonic plague</dt>
-<dt>Blois, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></dt>
-<dt>Bologna, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></dt>
-<dt>Bombard, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></dt>
-<dt>Bombs, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></dt>
-<dt>Borgia, Cesare, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>-97, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></dt>
-<dt>Borgias, the, <a href="#Page_102">102</a></dt>
-<dt>Botticelli, Sandro, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></dt>
-<dt>Boureau, Guillaume, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></dt>
-<dt>Bramante, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></dt>
-<dt>Bridge building, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></dt>
-<dt>Bubonic plague, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>-47</dt>
-<dt>Buonarroti, Michelangelo, <i>see</i> Michelangelo</dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_C"><b>C</b></dt>
-<dt>&ldquo;Camera obscura,&rdquo; <a href="#Page_55">55</a></dt>
-<dt>Campo Morto, battle of, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></dt>
-<dt class="pb" id="Page_165">165</dt>
-<dt>Cannon, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></dt>
-<dt>Caravaggio, siege of, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></dt>
-<dt>Cardano, Girolamo, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></dt>
-<dt>Carles, Geffroy, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></dt>
-<dt>Carpentry, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></dt>
-<dt>Cassano, castle of, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></dt>
-<dt>Castel&rsquo; Sant&rsquo; Angelo, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></dt>
-<dt>Caterina, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></dt>
-<dt>Cellini, Benvenuto, <a href="#Page_100">100</a></dt>
-<dt>Centrifugal pump, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a></dt>
-<dt>Cesena, <a href="#Page_94">94</a></dt>
-<dt>Chambord, castle of, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></dt>
-<dt>Charles d&rsquo;Amboise, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>-117, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></dt>
-<dt>Chateau d&rsquo;Amboise, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>-156</dt>
-<dt>Cher river, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></dt>
-<dt>Christ, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></dt>
-<dt>Church of the Annunciation of the Servite Order of Monks, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></dt>
-<dt>Church, the, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></dt>
-<dt>Cioni, Andrea di Michele di Francesco de&rsquo;, <i>see</i> Verrochio, Andrea del</dt>
-<dt>City Planning, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></dt>
-<dt>City-states, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></dt>
-<dt>Civitavecchia, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></dt>
-<dt>Cloux, Manoir de, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></dt>
-<dt>Coins, minting of, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></dt>
-<dt>Collections, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></dt>
-<dt>Columbus, Christopher, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></dt>
-<dt>Constantinople, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></dt>
-<dt>Corte, Bernardino da, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></dt>
-<dt>Corte Vecchia, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></dt>
-<dt>Coulomb, A. C., <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></dt>
-<dt>Council of Eighty, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></dt>
-<dt>Council of Florence, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></dt>
-<dt>Councilors and Tribunal of Venice, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></dt>
-<dt>Credi, Lorenzo di, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></dt>
-<dt>Cusanus, Cardinal, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_D"><b>D</b></dt>
-<dt>Dams, <a href="#Page_101">101</a></dt>
-<dt>Danti, Giovanni Battista, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></dt>
-<dt>d&rsquo;Aragona, Cardinal Luigi, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></dt>
-<dt>Darwin, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></dt>
-<dt>d&rsquo;Auvergne, Madelaine, <a href="#Page_153">153</a></dt>
-<dt>David, statue of, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></dt>
-<dt><i>De Ludo Geometrico</i>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></dt>
-<dt>d&rsquo;Este, Beatrice, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></dt>
-<dt>d&rsquo;Este, Isabella, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></dt>
-<dt>Diocletian, Emperor, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></dt>
-<dt>Diseases, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></dt>
-<dt>Dissection, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></dt>
-<dt>Diver&rsquo;s suit, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></dt>
-<dt>Drawing, <i>see</i> Painting</dt>
-<dt>Drum, mechanical, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></dt>
-<dt>Dynamics, <a href="#Page_140">140</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_E"><b>E</b></dt>
-<dt>Earth, the, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></dt>
-<dt>Eclipse of the sun, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></dt>
-<dt>Einstein, <a href="#Page_153">153</a></dt>
-<dt>Equilibrium, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></dt>
-<dt>Euclid, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></dt>
-<dt>Eye, the, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_F"><b>F</b></dt>
-<dt>Ferdinand, King of Naples, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></dt>
-<dt>Ferrara, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></dt>
-<dt>Ferrari, Ambrogio, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></dt>
-<dt>Fiesole, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></dt>
-<dt>Flemish painters, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></dt>
-<dt>Flight,</dt>
-<dd>of arrow, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></dd>
-<dd>of birds, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></dd>
-<dd>problems of, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>-100, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>-113</dd>
-<dt>Florence, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>-19, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>-27, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>-96, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>-103</dt>
-<dt>Flying machine, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></dt>
-<dt>Foix, Gaston de, <a href="#Page_127">127</a></dt>
-<dt>Forts, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></dt>
-<dt>Forum of the Caesars, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></dt>
-<dt>Four elements, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></dt>
-<dt>France, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>-69, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>-84, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>-120, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>-145, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></dt>
-<dt>Francis I, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>-145, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>-157</dt>
-<dt>Fraternity of the Immaculate Conception, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></dt>
-<dt>Friction, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_G"><b>G</b></dt>
-<dt>Galen, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></dt>
-<dt>Galileo, Galilei, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></dt>
-<dt>Genoa, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></dt>
-<dt>Geocentric theory, <i>see</i> Ptolemaic theory</dt>
-<dt>Geography, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></dt>
-<dt>Geology, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></dt>
-<dt>Geometry, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></dt>
-<dt>Georg, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></dt>
-<dt>Geotropism, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></dt>
-<dt class="pb" id="Page_166">166</dt>
-<dt>Germany, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></dt>
-<dt>Ghirlandaio, Domenico di Tommaso del, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></dt>
-<dt>Giocondo, Francesco del, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></dt>
-<dt>Giovanni &ldquo;the Piper,&rdquo; <a href="#Page_100">100</a></dt>
-<dt>Gonzaga, Francesco, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></dt>
-<dt>Gothic tradition, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></dt>
-<dt>Gravity, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></dt>
-<dt>Greeks, the, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></dt>
-<dt>Guido, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></dt>
-<dt>Guild, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_H"><b>H</b></dt>
-<dt>Hadrian, Emperor, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></dt>
-<dt>Harvey, William, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></dt>
-<dt>Heavens, observation of, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></dt>
-<dt>Heliocentric theory, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></dt>
-<dt>Heliotropism, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></dt>
-<dt>Highmore, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></dt>
-<dt>Hippocrates, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></dt>
-<dt>Holy Roman Empire, <a href="#Page_9">9</a></dt>
-<dt>Hooke, Robert, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></dt>
-<dt>Horse, anatomy of the, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></dt>
-<dt>Hydraulic pump, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></dt>
-<dt>Hydraulics, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></dt>
-<dt>Hydrodynamics, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></dt>
-<dt>Hygrometer, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_I"><b>I</b></dt>
-<dt>Imola, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></dt>
-<dt>Inclination gauge, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></dt>
-<dt>India, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></dt>
-<dt><i>Introduction to Perspective, or the Function of the Eye</i>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></dt>
-<dt>Inventions, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>-27, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>-40</dt>
-<dt>Irradiation, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></dt>
-<dt>Irrigation, <a href="#Page_101">101</a></dt>
-<dt>Isabella of Aragon, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></dt>
-<dt>Isonzo river, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></dt>
-<dt>Istanbul, <i>see</i> Constantinople</dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_J"><b>J</b></dt>
-<dt>Johannes, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></dt>
-<dt>Judas, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_K"><b>K</b></dt>
-<dt>King Charles VIII, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>-69, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_L"><b>L</b></dt>
-<dt>Lake Como, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></dt>
-<dt>Lamps, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></dt>
-<dt>Lanfredini, Francesca, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></dt>
-<dt>&ldquo;Last Supper,&rdquo; <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></dt>
-<dt>League of Cambria, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></dt>
-<dt>Leghorn, <a href="#Page_100">100</a></dt>
-<dt>Leibig, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></dt>
-<dt>Leonardo da Vinci,</dt>
-<dd>and the Church, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></dd>
-<dd>birth of, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></dd>
-<dd>death of, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></dd>
-<dd>early years of, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>-8</dd>
-<dd>illness of, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a></dd>
-<dd>moves to Florence, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></dd>
-<dd>notebooks of, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></dd>
-<dt>Levite, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></dt>
-<dt><i>Light and Shade</i>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></dt>
-<dt>Lighting, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></dt>
-<dt>Lilienthal, Otto, <a href="#Page_100">100</a></dt>
-<dt>Livoli river, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></dt>
-<dt>Loches, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></dt>
-<dt>Loire river, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></dt>
-<dt>Lombardy, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>,148</dt>
-<dt>Louis XII (of Orleans), <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></dt>
-<dt>Louvre, the, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></dt>
-<dt>Lucullus, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></dt>
-<dt>Lyons, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></dt>
-<dt>Lyre, silver, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_M"><b>M</b></dt>
-<dt>Machiavelli, Niccol&ograve;, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></dt>
-<dt>Machine gun, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></dt>
-<dt>Machinery, improvement of, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></dt>
-<dt>Madonna Lisa, <i>see</i> Mona Lisa</dt>
-<dt>Malaria, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></dt>
-<dt>Mandeville, Sir John, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></dt>
-<dt>Manenti, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></dt>
-<dt>Mantua, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></dt>
-<dt>Mapmaking, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a></dt>
-<dt>Martelli, Piero, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></dt>
-<dt>Martini, Francesco di Giorgio, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></dt>
-<dt>Martino river, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></dt>
-<dt>Mathurine, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></dt>
-<dt>Maximilian I, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></dt>
-<dt>Medici, Giovanni de&rsquo;, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></dt>
-<dt>Medici, Giuliano de&rsquo;, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>-146</dt>
-<dt>Medici, Lorenzo de&rsquo;, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a></dt>
-<dt>Medici, Piero de&rsquo;, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></dt>
-<dt>Medicis, the, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></dt>
-<dt class="pb" id="Page_167">167</dt>
-<dt>Melzi, Francesco de&rsquo;, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></dt>
-<dt>Michelangelo, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></dt>
-<dt>Middle Ages, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></dt>
-<dt>Migliorotti, Atalante, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>-38, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></dt>
-<dt>Milan, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>-48, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>-128, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></dt>
-<dt>Milan cathedral, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></dt>
-<dt>Military,</dt>
-<dd>defenses, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></dd>
-<dd>machines, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>-27, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>-40</dd>
-<dt>Millstones, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></dt>
-<dt>Mitre valve, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></dt>
-<dt>Mirrors, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></dt>
-<dt>&ldquo;Mona Lisa,&rdquo; <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></dt>
-<dt>Monferrato, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></dt>
-<dt>Monte Albano, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></dt>
-<dt>Monte Cecero, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></dt>
-<dt>Montorfano, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></dt>
-<dt>Muscles, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></dt>
-<dt>Music, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_N"><b>N</b></dt>
-<dt>Naples, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></dt>
-<dt>Needle sharpener, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></dt>
-<dt>Netherlands, the, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></dt>
-<dt>Newton, Isaac, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></dt>
-<dt>Newton&rsquo;s First Law of Motion, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></dt>
-<dt>Newton&rsquo;s law of gravitation, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></dt>
-<dt><i>Notes</i>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></dt>
-<dt>Novara, battle of, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_O"><b>O</b></dt>
-<dt>Odometer, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></dt>
-<dt>Oggionno, Marco d&rsquo;, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></dt>
-<dt>Orient, the, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></dt>
-<dt>Ornithopter, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_P"><b>P</b></dt>
-<dt>Pacioli, Fra Luca, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>-91, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></dt>
-<dt>Padua, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></dt>
-<dt>Painting, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>-7, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>-32, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></dt>
-<dt>Palatine hill, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></dt>
-<dt>Palazzo della Signoria, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>-25, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></dt>
-<dt>Palazzo Vecchio, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></dt>
-<dt>Parachute, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></dt>
-<dt>Paris, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></dt>
-<dt>Parma, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></dt>
-<dt>Pater, Walter, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></dt>
-<dt>Pavia, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></dt>
-<dt>Pazzi conspiracy, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></dt>
-<dt>Pazzi, Francesco de&rsquo;, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></dt>
-<dt>Pera, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></dt>
-<dt>&ldquo;Periscope,&rdquo; the, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></dt>
-<dt>Perugia, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></dt>
-<dt>Perugino, Pietro, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></dt>
-<dt>Pesaro, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></dt>
-<dt>Peschiera, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></dt>
-<dt>Pharisee, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></dt>
-<dt>Philiberta, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></dt>
-<dt>Phyllotaxis, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></dt>
-<dt>Physics, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></dt>
-<dt>Piazzetta, the, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></dt>
-<dt>Pincio hill, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></dt>
-<dt>Piombino, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></dt>
-<dt>Pisa, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>-102, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></dt>
-<dt>Pitti Palace, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></dt>
-<dt>Plague, <i>see</i> Bubonic plague</dt>
-<dt>Plants, study of, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></dt>
-<dt>Platonic school, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></dt>
-<dt>Pliny, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></dt>
-<dt>Plutarch, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></dt>
-<dt>Pollaiuolo, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></dt>
-<dt>Ponte Vecchio, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></dt>
-<dt>Pontine marshes, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></dt>
-<dt>Pope Alexander VI, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a></dt>
-<dt>Pope Innocent VIII, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></dt>
-<dt>Pope Julius II, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></dt>
-<dt>Pope Leo X, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>-132, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>-146, <a href="#Page_153">153</a></dt>
-<dt>Pope Sixtus IV, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></dt>
-<dt>Porta del Popolo, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></dt>
-<dt>Porta Romana, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></dt>
-<dt>Porta Vercellina, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></dt>
-<dt>Porto Cesanatico, <a href="#Page_94">94</a></dt>
-<dt>Portugal, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></dt>
-<dt>Predis, Bernardino de, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></dt>
-<dt>Predis, Giovanni Ambrogio de, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></dt>
-<dt>Ptolemaic theory, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></dt>
-<dt>Ptolemy, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_Q"><b>Q</b></dt>
-<dt>Queen Claude, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_R"><b>R</b></dt>
-<dt>Raphael, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></dt>
-<dt>Ravenna, battle of, <a href="#Page_127">127</a></dt>
-<dt>Red Book of the Painters of Florence, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></dt>
-<dt class="pb" id="Page_168">168</dt>
-<dt>Reflection, law of, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></dt>
-<dt>Renaissance, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></dt>
-<dt>Riario, Girolamo, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></dt>
-<dt>Rimini, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></dt>
-<dt>Rome, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>-146</dt>
-<dt>Romorantin, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></dt>
-<dt>Rosate, Ambrogio da, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></dt>
-<dt>Rumford, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></dt>
-<dt>Rustici, Giovanni, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_S"><b>S</b></dt>
-<dt>&ldquo;St. Anne with the Virgin and Child,&rdquo; <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></dt>
-<dt>St. Augustine, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></dt>
-<dt>Saint-Denis church, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></dt>
-<dt>St. Germain-en-Laye, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></dt>
-<dt>Saint-Hubert, chapel of, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></dt>
-<dt>St. John, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></dt>
-<dt>St. John the Baptist, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></dt>
-<dt>St. Luke, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></dt>
-<dt>St. Mary of the Virgin, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></dt>
-<dt>St. Peter&rsquo;s, church of, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></dt>
-<dt>Salai, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></dt>
-<dt>Salviati, Francesco, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></dt>
-<dt>San Bernardo, chapel of, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></dt>
-<dt>San Cristoforo, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></dt>
-<dt>San Donato a Scopeto, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></dt>
-<dt>San Lorenzo, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></dt>
-<dt>San Marco, Little Square of, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></dt>
-<dt>Sanseverino, Galeazzo da, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></dt>
-<dt>Sant&rsquo; Onofrio, hospital, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></dt>
-<dt>Santa Croce, church of, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></dt>
-<dt>Santa Maria delle Grazie, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></dt>
-<dt>Santa Maria Novella, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></dt>
-<dt>Sanzio, Raffaello, <i>see</i> Raphael</dt>
-<dt>Savoy, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></dt>
-<dt>Scarlione, Bartolommeo degli, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></dt>
-<dt>Sculpture, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>-54, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>-64, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></dt>
-<dt>Sforza, Duke Gian Galeazzo, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a></dt>
-<dt>Sforza, Francesco, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></dt>
-<dt>Sforza, Francesco (child), <a href="#Page_68">68</a></dt>
-<dt>Sforza, Ludovico, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>-47, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>-72, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>-79, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>-84, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></dt>
-<dt>Sforza monument, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>-59, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a></dt>
-<dt>Sforzas, the, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></dt>
-<dt>Shells, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></dt>
-<dt>Signoria, the, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>-106, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></dt>
-<dt>Sistine Chapel, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></dt>
-<dt>Soderini, Piero, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>-116</dt>
-<dt>Sologne, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></dt>
-<dt>Spain, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></dt>
-<dt>Statics, <a href="#Page_140">140</a></dt>
-<dt>Steam, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></dt>
-<dt>Strabo, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></dt>
-<dt>Swiss, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_T"><b>T</b></dt>
-<dt>Ticino gate, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></dt>
-<dt>Torre, Marcantonio della, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></dt>
-<dt>Toscanelli, Paolo del Pozzo, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></dt>
-<dt>Touraine, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></dt>
-<dt>Trivulzio, Marshal Gian Giacomo, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></dt>
-<dt>Turks, the, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>-90, <a href="#Page_94">94</a></dt>
-<dt>Tuscany, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></dt>
-<dt>Tyrrhenian coast, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_U"><b>U</b></dt>
-<dt>Uffizi Gallery, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></dt>
-<dt>University of Padua, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></dt>
-<dt>University of Pavia, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></dt>
-<dt>Urbino, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_V"><b>V</b></dt>
-<dt>Valentinois, Duke of, <i>see</i> Borgia, Cesare</dt>
-<dt>Valois, Marguerite de, <a href="#Page_150">150</a></dt>
-<dt>Vatican, the, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>-145</dt>
-<dt>Venice, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>-89, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a></dt>
-<dt>Verrochio, Andrea del, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>-19, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></dt>
-<dt>Via Ghibellina, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></dt>
-<dt>Vigevano, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></dt>
-<dt>Vinci, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></dt>
-<dt>Vinci, da, Giuliano, <a href="#Page_117">117</a></dt>
-<dt>Vinci, da, Piero, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>-7, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a></dt>
-<dt>&ldquo;Virgin of the Rocks,&rdquo; <a href="#Page_44">44</a></dt>
-<dt>Vitellozzo, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></dt>
-<dt>Vitruvius, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_W"><b>W</b></dt>
-<dt>Water, study of, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a></dt>
-<dt>Watt, James, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></dt>
-<dt>Witelo, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt class="center" id="index_Y"><b>Y</b></dt>
-<dt>Yugoslavia, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/pg098.jpg" alt="Endpaper, portraits of scientists" width="600" height="777" />
-</div>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/pg099.jpg" alt="Endpaper, names of scientists" width="600" height="725" />
-</div>
-<h2>Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</h2>
-<ul>
-<li>Silently corrected a few typos.</li>
-<li>Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.</li>
-<li>In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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-</pre>
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