The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci — Volume 2 by Leonardo da Vinci
page 122 of 614 (19%)
page 122 of 614 (19%)
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England. It is, I believe, possible to assign the date with
approximate accuracy to almost all the fragments, and I am thus led to conclude that the greater part of Leonardo's anatomical investigations were carried out after the death of della Torre. Merely in reading the introductory notes to his various books on Anatomy which are here printed it is impossible to resist the impression that the Master's anatomical studies bear to a very great extent the stamp of originality and independent thought. I. ANATOMY. 796. A general introduction I wish to work miracles;--it may be that I shall possess less than other men of more peaceful lives, or than those who want to grow rich in a day. I may live for a long time in great poverty, as always happens, and to all eternity will happen, to alchemists, the would-be creators of gold and silver, and to engineers who would have dead water stir itself into life and perpetual motion, and to those supreme fools, the necromancer and the enchanter. [Footnote 23: The following seems to be directed against students of painting and young artists rather than against medical men and anatomists.] |
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