“ No body can be apprehended without light and shade, and light and shade are caused by light. ”
Leonardo da Vinci, The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci (1478 – 1519). copy citation
Author | Leonardo da Vinci |
---|---|
Source | The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci |
Topic | light body |
Date | 1478 – 1519 |
Language | English |
Reference | |
Note | Translated by Jean Paul Richter in 1888 |
Weblink | http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/5000/pg5000-images.html |
Context
“If you make a cat leap, by daylight, among a quantity of jars and crocks you will see them remain unbroken, but if you do the same at night, many will be broken. Night birds do not fly about unless the moon shines full or in part; rather do they feed between sun-down and the total darkness of the night.
[Footnote 8: See No. 58-67.]
No body can be apprehended without light and shade, and light and shade are caused by light.
835.
WHY MEN ADVANCED IN AGE SEE BETTER AT A DISTANCE. Sight is better from a distance than near in those men who are advancing in age, because the same object transmits a smaller impression of itself to the eye when it is distant than when it is near.”
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