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Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci, The
VOLUME II   VOLUME II - SECTION XI. THE NOTES ON SCULPTURE
Leonardo da Vinci
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       VOLUME II - SECTION XI. THE NOTES ON SCULPTURE
       Compared with the mass of manuscript treating of Painting, a very
       small number of passages bearing on the practice and methods of
       Sculpture are to be found scattered through the note books; these
       are here given at the beginning of this section (Nos. 706-709).
       There is less cause for surprise at finding that the equestrian
       statue of Francesco Sforza is only incidentally spoken of; for,
       although Leonardo must have worked at it for a long succession of
       years, it is not in the nature of the case that it could have given
       rise to much writing. We may therefore regard it as particularly
       fortunate that no fewer than thirteen notes in the master's
       handwriting can be brought together, which seem to throw light on
       the mysterious history of this famous work. Until now writers on
       Leonardo were acquainted only with the passages numbered 712, 719,
       720, 722 and 723.
       In arranging these notes on sculpture I have given the precedence to
       those which treat of the casting of the monument, not merely because
       they are the fullest, but more especially with a view to
       reconstructing the monument, an achievement which really almost lies
       within our reach by combining and comparing the whole of the
       materials now brought to light, alike in notes and in sketches.
       A good deal of the first two passages, Nos. 710 and 711, which refer
       to this subject seems obscure and incomprehensible; still, they
       supplement each other and one contributes in no small degree to the
       comprehension of the other. A very interesting and instructive
       commentary on these passages may be found in the fourth chapter of
       Vasari's Introduzione della Scultura under the title "Come si fanno
       i modelli per fare di bronzo le figure grandi e picciole, e come le
       forme per buttarle; come si armino di ferri, e come si gettino di
       metallo," &c. Among the drawings of models of the moulds for casting
       we find only one which seems to represent the horse in the act of
       galloping--No. 713. All the other designs show the horse as pacing
       quietly and as these studies of the horse are accompanied by copious
       notes as to the method of casting, the question as to the position
       of the horse in the model finally selected, seems to be decided by
       preponderating evidence. "Il cavallo dello Sforza"--C. Boito remarks
       very appositely in the Saggio on page 26, "doveva sembrare fratello
       al cavallo del Colleoni. E si direbbe che questo fosse figlio del
       cavallo del Gattamelata, il quale pare figlio di uno dei quattro
       cavalli che stavano forse sull' Arco di Nerone in Roma" (now at
       Venice). The publication of the Saggio also contains the
       reproduction of a drawing in red chalk, representing a horse walking
       to the left and supported by a scaffolding, given here on Pl. LXXVI,
       No. 1. It must remain uncertain whether this represents the model as
       it stood during the preparations for casting it, or whether--as
       seems to me highly improbable--this sketch shows the model as it was
       exhibited in 1493 on the Piazza del Castello in Milan under a
       triumphal arch, on the occasion of the marriage of the Emperor
       Maximilian to Bianca Maria Sforza. The only important point here is
       to prove that strong evidence seems to show that, of the numerous
       studies for the equestrian statue, only those which represent the
       horse pacing agree with the schemes of the final plans.
       The second group of preparatory sketches, representing the horse as
       galloping, must therefore be considered separately, a distinction
       which, in recapitulating the history of the origin of the monument
       seems justified by the note given under No. 720.
       Galeazza Maria Sforza was assassinated in 1476 before his scheme for
       erecting a monument to his father Francesco Sforza could be carried
       into effect. In the following year Ludovico il Moro the young
       aspirant to the throne was exiled to Pisa, and only returned to
       Milan in 1479 when he was Lord (Governatore) of the State of Milan,
       in 1480 after the minister Cecco Simonetta had been murdered. It may
       have been soon after this that Ludovico il Moro announced a
       competition for an equestrian statue, and it is tolerably certain
       that Antonio del Pollajuolo took part in it, from this passage in
       Vasari's Life of this artist: "E si trovo, dopo la morte sua, il
       disegno e modello che a Lodovico Sforza egli aveva fatto per la
       statua a cavallo di Francesco Sforza, duca di Milano; il quale
       disegno e nel nostro Libro, in due modi: in uno egli ha sotto
       Verona; nell'altro, egli tutto armato, e sopra un basamento pieno di
       battaglie, fa saltare il cavallo addosso a un armato; ma la cagione
       perche non mettesse questi disegni in opera, non ho gia potuto
       sapere." One of Pollajuolo's drawings, as here described, has lately
       been discovered by Senatore Giovanni Morelli in the Munich
       Pinacothek. Here the profile of the horseman is a portrait of
       Francesco Duke of Milan, and under the horse, who is galloping to
       the left, we see a warrior thrown and lying on the ground; precisely
       the same idea as we find in some of Leonardo's designs for the
       monument, as on Pl. LXVI, LXVII, LXVIII, LXIX and LXXII No. 1; and,
       as it is impossible to explain this remarkable coincidence by
       supposing that either artist borrowed it from the other, we can only
       conclude that in the terms of the competition the subject proposed
       was the Duke on a horse in full gallop, with a fallen foe under its
       hoofs.
       Leonardo may have been in the competition there and then, but the
       means for executing the monument do not seem to have been at once
       forthcoming. It was not perhaps until some years later that Leonardo
       in a letter to the Duke (No. 719) reminded him of the project for
       the monument. Then, after he had obeyed a summons to Milan, the plan
       seems to have been so far modified, perhaps in consequence of a
       remonstrance on the part of the artist, that a pacing horse was
       substituted for one galloping, and it may have been at the same time
       that the colossal dimensions of the statue were first decided on.
       The designs given on Pl. LXX, LXXI, LXXII, 2 and 3, LXXIII and LXXIV
       and on pp. 4 and 24, as well as three sketches on Pl. LXIX may be
       studied with reference to the project in its new form, though it is
       hardly possible to believe that in either of these we see the design
       as it was actually carried out. It is probable that in Milan
       Leonardo worked less on drawings, than in making small models of wax
       and clay as preparatory to his larger model. Among the drawings
       enumerated above, one in black chalk, Pl. LXXIII--the upper sketch
       on the right hand side, reminds us strongly of the antique statue of
       Marcus Aurelius. If, as it would seem, Leonardo had not until then
       visited Rome, he might easily have known this statue from drawings
       by his former master and friend Verrocchio, for Verrocchio had been
       in Rome for a long time between 1470 and 1480. In 1473 Pope Sixtus
       IV had this antique equestrian statue restored and placed on a new
       pedestal in front of the church of San Giovanni in Luterano.
       Leonardo, although he was painting independently as early as in 1472
       is still spoken of as working in Verrocchio's studio in 1477. Two
       years later the Venetian senate decided on erecting an equestrian
       statue to Colleoni; and as Verrocchio, to whom the work was
       entrusted, did not at once move from Florence to Venice--where he
       died in 1488 before the casting was completed--but on the contrary
       remained in Florence for some years, perhaps even till 1485,
       Leonardo probably had the opportunity of seeing all his designs for
       the equestrian statue at Venice and the red chalk drawing on Pl.
       LXXIV may be a reminiscence of it.
       The pen and ink drawing on Pl. LXXII, No. 3, reminds us of
       Donatello's statue of Gattamelata at Padua. However it does not
       appear that Leonardo was ever at Padua before 1499, but we may
       conclude that he took a special interest in this early bronze statue
       and the reports he could procure of it, form an incidental remark
       which is to be found in C. A. 145a; 432a, and which will be given in
       Vol. II under Ricordi or Memoranda. Among the studies--in the widest
       sense of the word--made in preparation statue we may include the
       Anatomy of the Horse which Lomazzo and Vas mention; the most
       important parts of this work still exist in the Queen's Li Windsor.
       It was beyond a doubt compiled by Leonardo when at Milan; only
       interesting records to be found among these designs are reproduced
       in Nos. 716a but it must be pointed out that out of 40 sheets of
       studies of the movements of the belonging to that treatise, a horse
       in full gallop occurs but once.
       If we may trust the account given by Paulus Jovius--about l527--
       Leonardo's horse was represented as "vehementer incitatus et
       anhelatus". Jovius had probably seen the model exhibited at Milan;
       but, need we, in fact, infer from this description that the horse
       was galloping? Compare Vasari's description of the Gattamelata
       monument at Padua: "Egli [Donatello] vi ando ben volentieri, e fece
       il cavallo di bronzo, che e in sulla piazza di Sant Antonio, nel
       quale si dimostra lo sbuffamento ed il fremito del cavallo, ed il
       grande animo e la fierezza vivacissimamente espressa dall'arte nella
       figura che lo cavalca".
       These descriptions, it seems to me, would only serve to mark the
       difference between the work of the middle ages and that of the
       renaissance.
       We learn from a statement of Sabba da Castiglione that, when Milan
       was taken by the French in 1499, the model sustained some injury;
       and this informant, who, however is not invariably trustworthy, adds
       that Leonardo had devoted fully sixteen years to this work (la forma
       del cavallo, intorno a cui Leonardo avea sedici anni continui
       consumati). This often-quoted passage has given ground for an
       assumption, which has no other evidence to support it, that Leonardo
       had lived in Milan ever since 1483. But I believe it is nearer the
       truth to suppose that this author's statement alludes to the fact
       that about sixteen years must have past since the competition in
       which Leonardo had taken part.
       I must in these remarks confine myself strictly to the task in hand
       and give no more of the history of the Sforza monument than is
       needed to explain the texts and drawings I have been able to
       reproduce. In the first place, with regard to the drawings, I may
       observe that they are all, with the following two exceptions, in the
       Queen's Library at Windsor Castle; the red chalk drawing on Pl.
       LXXVI No. 1 is in the MS. C. A. (see No. 7l2) and the fragmentary
       pen and ink drawing on page 4 is in the Ambrosian Library. The
       drawings from Windsor on Pl. LXVI have undergone a trifling
       reduction from the size of the originals.
       There can no longer be the slightest doubt that the well-known
       engraving of several horsemen (Passavant, Le Peintre-Graveur, Vol.
       V, p. 181, No. 3) is only a copy after original drawings by
       Leonardo, executed by some unknown engraver; we have only to compare
       the engraving with the facsimiles of drawings on Pl. LXV, No. 2, Pl.
       LXVII, LXVIII and LXIX which, it is quite evident, have served as
       models for the engraver.
       On Pl. LXV No. 1, in the larger sketch to the right hand, only the
       base is distinctly visible, the figure of the horseman is effaced.
       Leonardo evidently found it unsatisfactory and therefore rubbed it
       out.
       The base of the monument--the pedestal for the equestrian statue--is
       repeatedly sketched on a magnificent plan. In the sketch just
       mentioned it has the character of a shrine or aedicula to contain a
       sarcophagus. Captives in chains are here represented on the
       entablature with their backs turned to that portion of the monument
       which more strictly constitutes the pedestal of the horse. The lower portion of
       the aedicula is surrounded by columns. In the pen and ink drawing
       Pl. LXVI--the lower drawing on the right hand side--the sarcophagus
       is shown between the columns, and above the entablature is a plinth
       on which the horse stands. But this arrangement perhaps seemed to
       Leonardo to lack solidity, and in the little sketch on the left
       hand, below, the sarcophagus is shown as lying under an arched
       canopy. In this the trophies and the captive warriors are detached
       from the angles. In the first of these two sketches the place for
       the trophies is merely indicated by a few strokes; in the third
       sketch on the left the base is altogether broader, buttresses and
       pinnacles having been added so as to form three niches. The black
       chalk drawing on Pl. LXVIII shows a base in which the angles are
       formed by niches with pilasters. In the little sketch to the extreme
       left on Pl. LXV, No. 1, the equestrian statue serves to crown a
       circular temple somewhat resembling Bramante's tempietto of San
       Pietro in Montario at Rome, while the sketch above to the right
       displays an arrangement faintly reminding us of the tomb of the
       Scaligers in Verona. The base is thus constructed of two platforms
       or slabs, the upper one considerably smaller than the lower one
       which is supported on flying buttresses with pinnacles.
       On looking over the numerous studies in which the horse is not
       galloping but merely walking forward, we find only one drawing for
       the pedestal, and this, to accord with the altered character of the
       statue, is quieter and simpler in style (Pl. LXXIV). It rises almost
       vertically from the ground and is exactly as long as the pacing
       horse. The whole base is here arranged either as an independent
       baldaquin or else as a projecting canopy over a recess in which the
       figure of the deceased Duke is seen lying on his sarcophagus; in the
       latter case it was probably intended as a tomb inside a church.
       Here, too, it was intended to fill the angles with trophies or
       captive warriors. Probably only No. 724 in the text refers to the
       work for the base of the monument.
       If we compare the last mentioned sketch with the description of a
       plan for an equestrian monument to Gian Giacomo Trivulzio (No. 725)
       it seems by no means impossible that this drawing is a preparatory
       study for the very monument concerning which the manuscript gives us
       detailed information. We have no historical record regarding this
       sketch nor do the archives in the Trivulzio Palace give us any
       information. The simple monument to the great general in San Nazaro
       Maggiore in Milan consists merely of a sarcophagus placed in recess
       high on the wall of an octagonal chapel. The figure of the warrior
       is lying on the sarcophagus, on which his name is inscribed; a piece
       of sculpture which is certainly not Leonardo's work. Gian Giacomo
       Trivulzio died at Chartres in 1518, only five months before
       Leonardo, and it seems to me highly improbable that this should have
       been the date of this sketch; under these circumstances it would
       have been done under the auspices of Francis I, but the Italian
       general was certainly not in favour with the French monarch at the
       time. Gian Giacomo Trivulzio was a sworn foe to Ludovico il Moro,
       whom he strove for years to overthrow. On the 6th September 1499 he
       marched victorious into Milan at the head of a French army. In a
       short time, however, he was forced to quit Milan again when Ludovico
       il Moro bore down upon the city with a force of Swiss troops. On the
       15th of April following, after defeating Lodovico at Novara,
       Trivulzio once more entered Milan as a Conqueror, but his hopes of
       becoming _Governatore_ of the place were soon wrecked by intrigue.
       This victory and triumph, historians tell us, were signalised by
       acts of vengeance against the dethroned Sforza, and it might have
       been particularly flattering to him that the casting and
       construction of the Sforza monument were suspended for the time.
       It must have been at this moment--as it seems to me--that he
       commissioned the artist to prepare designs for his own monument,
       which he probably intended should find a place in the Cathedral or
       in some other church. He, the husband of Margherita di Nicolino
       Colleoni, would have thought that he had a claim to the same
       distinction and public homage as his less illustrious connection had
       received at the hands of the Venetian republic. It was at this very
       time that Trivulzio had a medal struck with a bust portrait of
       himself and the following remarkable inscription on the reverse:_
       DEO FAVENTE--1499--DICTVS--10--IA--EXPVLIT--LVDOVICV--SF--
       (Sfortiam) DVC-- (ducem) MLI (Mediolani)--NOIE
       (nomine)--REGIS--FRANCORVM--EODEM--ANN --(anno) RED'T (redit)--LVS
       (Ludovicus)--SVPERATVS ET CAPTVS--EST--AB--EO. _In the Library of
       the Palazzo Trivulzio there is a MS. of Callimachus Siculus written
       at the end of the XVth or beginning of the XVIth century. At the
       beginning of this MS. there is an exquisite illuminated miniature of
       an equestrian statue with the name of the general on the base; it is
       however very doubtful whether this has any connection with
       Leonardo's design.
       Nos. 731-740, which treat of casting bronze, have probably a very
       indirect bearing on the arrangements made for casting the equestrian
       statue of Francesco Sforza. Some portions evidently relate to the
       casting of cannon. Still, in our researches about Leonardo's work on
       the monument, we may refer to them as giving us some clue to the
       process of bronze casting at that period.
       Some practical hints (706-709)
       7O6.
       OF A STATUE.
       If you wish to make a figure in marble, first make one of clay, and
       when you have finished it, let it dry and place it in a case which
       should be large enough, after the figure is taken out of it, to
       receive also the marble, from which you intend to reveal the figure
       in imitation of the one in clay. After you have put the clay figure
       into this said case, have little rods which will exactly slip in to
       the holes in it, and thrust them so far in at each hole that each
       white rod may touch the figure in different parts of it. And colour
       the portion of the rod that remains outside black, and mark each rod
       and each hole with a countersign so that each may fit into its
       place. Then take the clay figure out of this case and put in your
       piece of marble, taking off so much of the marble that all your rods
       may be hidden in the holes as far as their marks; and to be the
       better able to do this, make the case so that it can be lifted up;
       but the bottom of it will always remain under the marble and in this
       way it can be lifted with tools with great ease.
       707.
       Some have erred in teaching sculptors to measure the limbs of their
       figures with threads as if they thought that these limbs were
       equally round in every part where these threads were wound about
       them.
       708.
       MEASUREMENT AND DIVISION OF A STATUE.
       Divide the head into 12 degrees, and each degree divide into 12
       points, and each point into 12 minutes, and the minutes into minims
       and the minims into semi minims.
       Degree--point--minute--minim.
       709.
       Sculptured figures which appear in motion, will, in their standing
       position, actually look as if they were falling forward.
       [Footnote: _figure di rilievo_. Leonardo applies this term
       exclusively to wholly detached figures, especially to those standing
       free. This note apparently refers to some particular case, though we
       have no knowledge of what that may have been. If we suppose it to
       refer to the first model of the equestrian statue of Francesco
       Sforza (see the introduction to the notes on Sculpture) this
       observation may be regarded as one of his arguments for abandoning
       the first scheme of the Sforza Monument, in which the horse was to
       be galloping (see page 2). It is also in favour of this theory that
       the note is written in a manuscript volume already completed in
       1492. Leonardo's opinions as to the shortcomings of plastic works
       when compared with paintings are given under No. 655 and 656.]
       Notes on the casting of the Sforza monument (710-715)
       710.
       Three braces which bind the mould.
       [If you want to make simple casts quickly, make them in a box of
       river sand wetted with vinegar.]
       [When you shall have made the mould upon the horse you must make the
       thickness of the metal in clay.]
       Observe in alloying how many hours are wanted for each
       hundredweight. [In casting each one keep the furnace and its fire
       well stopped up.] [Let the inside of all the moulds be wetted with
       linseed oil or oil of turpentine, and then take a handful of
       powdered borax and Greek pitch with aqua vitae, and pitch the mould
       over outside so that being under ground the damp may not [damage
       it?]
       [To manage the large mould make a model of the small mould, make a
       small room in proportion.]
       [Make the vents in the mould while it is on the horse.]
       Hold the hoofs in the tongs, and cast them with fish glue. Weigh the
       parts of the mould and the quantity of metal it will take to fill
       them, and give so much to the furnace that it may afford to each
       part its amount of metal; and this you may know by weighing the clay
       of each part of the mould to which the quantity in the furnace must
       correspond. And this is done in order that the furnace for the legs
       when filled may not have to furnish metal from the legs to help out
       the head, which would be impossible. [Cast at the same casting as
       the horse the little door]
       [Footnote: The importance of the notes included under this number is
       not diminished by the fact that they have been lightly crossed out
       with red chalk. Possibly they were the first scheme for some fuller
       observations which no longer exist; or perhaps they were crossed out
       when Leonardo found himself obliged to give up the idea of casting
       the equestrian statue. In the original the first two sketches are
       above l. 1, and the third below l. 9.]
       711.
       THE MOULD FOR THE HORSE.
       Make the horse on legs of iron, strong and well set on a good
       foundation; then grease it and cover it with a coating, leaving each
       coat to dry thoroughly layer by layer; and this will thicken it by
       the breadth of three fingers. Now fix and bind it with iron as may
       be necessary. Moreover take off the mould and then make the
       thickness. Then fill the mould by degrees and make it good
       throughout; encircle and bind it with its irons and bake it inside
       where it has to touch the bronze.
       OF MAKING THE MOULD IN PIECES.
       Draw upon the horse, when finished, all the pieces of the mould with
       which you wish to cover the horse, and in laying on the clay cut it
       in every piece, so that when the mould is finished you can take it
       off, and then recompose it in its former position with its joins, by
       the countersigns.
       The square blocks _a b_ will be between the cover and the core, that
       is in the hollow where the melted bronze is to be; and these square
       blocks of bronze will support the intervals between the mould and
       the cover at an equal distance, and for this reason these squares
       are of great importance.
       The clay should be mixed with sand.
       Take wax, to return [what is not used] and to pay for what is used.
       Dry it in layers.
       Make the outside mould of plaster, to save time in drying and the
       expense in wood; and with this plaster enclose the irons [props]
       both outside and inside to a thickness of two fingers; make terra
       cotta. And this mould can be made in one day; half a boat load of
       plaster will serve you.
       Good.
       Dam it up again with glue and clay, or white of egg, and bricks and
       rubbish.
       [Footnote: See Pl. LXXV. The figure "40," close to the sketch in the
       middle of the page between lines 16 and 17 has been added by a
       collector's hand.
       In the original, below line 21, a square piece of the page has been
       cut out about 9 centimetres by 7 and a blank piece has been gummed
       into the place.
       Lines 22-24 are written on the margin. l. 27 and 28 are close to the
       second marginal sketch. l. 42 is a note written above the third
       marginal sketch and on the back of this sheet is the text given as
       No. 642. Compare also No. 802.]
       712.
       All the heads of the large nails.
       [Footnote: See Pl. LXXVI, No. i. This drawing has already been
       published in the "_Saggio delle Opere di L. da Vinci_." Milano 1872,
       Pl. XXIV, No. i. But, for various reasons I cannot regard the
       editor's suggestions as satisfactory. He says: "_Veggonsi le
       armature di legname colle quali forse venne sostenuto il modello,
       quando per le nozze di Bianca Maria Sforza con Massimiliano
       imperatore, esso fu collocato sotto un arco trionfale davanti al
       Castello_."
       713.
       These bindings go inside.
       714.
       Salt may be made from human excrements, burnt and calcined, made
       into lees and dried slowly at a fire, and all the excrements produce
       salt in a similar way and these salts when distilled, are very
       strong.
       [Footnote: VASARI repeatedly states, in the fourth chapter of his
       _Introduzione della Scultura_, that in preparing to cast bronze
       statues horse-dung was frequently used by sculptors. If,
       notwithstanding this, it remains doubtful whether I am justified in
       having introduced here this text of but little interest, no such
       doubt can be attached to the sketch which accompanies it.]
       715.
       METHOD OF FOUNDING AGAIN.
       This may be done when the furnace is made [Footnote: this note is
       written below the sketches.] strong and bruised.
       Models for the horse of the Sforza monument (716-718)
       7l6.
       Messer Galeazzo's big genet
       717.
       Messer Galeazzo's Sicilian horse.
       [Footnote: These notes are by the side of a drawing of a horse with
       figured measurements.]
       718.
       Measurement of the Sicilian horse the leg from behind, seen in
       front, lifted and extended.
       [Footnote: There is no sketch belonging to this passage. Galeazze
       here probably means Galeazze di San Severino, the famous captain who
       married Bianca the daughter of Ludovico il Moro.]
       Occasional references to the Sforza monument (719-724)
       719.
       Again, the bronze horse may be taken in hand, which is to be to the
       immortal glory and eternal honour of the happy memory of the prince
       your father, and of the illustrious house of Sforza.
       [Footnote: The letter from which this passage is here extracted will
       be found complete in section XXI. (see the explanation of it, on
       page 2).]
       720.
       On the 23rd of April 1490 I began this book, and recommenced the horse.
       721.
       There is to be seen, in the mountains of Parma and Piacenza, a
       multitude of shells and corals full of holes, still sticking to the
       rocks, and when I was at work on the great horse for Milan, a large
       sackful of them, which were found thereabout, was brought to me into
       my workshop, by certain peasants.
       722.
       Believe me, Leonardo the Florentine, who has to do the equestrian
       bronze statue of the Duke Francesco that he does not need to care
       about it, because he has work for all his life time, and, being so
       great a work, I doubt whether he can ever finish it. [Footnote: This
       passage is quoted from a letter to a committee at Piacenza for whom
       Leonardo seems to have undertaken to execute some work. The letter
       is given entire in section XXL; in it Leonardo remonstrates as to
       some unreasonable demands.]
       723.
       Of the horse I will say nothing because I know the times. [Footnote:
       This passage occurs in a rough copy of a letter to Ludovico il Moro,
       without date (see below among the letters).]
       724.
       During ten years the works on the marbles have been going on I will
       not wait for my payment beyond the time, when my works are finished.
       [Footnote: This possibly refers to the works for the pedestal of the
       equestrian statue concerning which we have no farther information in
       the MSS. See p. 6.]
       The project of the Trivulzio monument.
       725.
       THE MONUMENT TO MESSER GIOVANNI JACOMO DA TREVULZO.
       [2] Cost of the making and materials for the horse [5].
       [Footnote: In the original, lines 2-5, 12-14, 33-35, are written on
       the margin. This passage has been recently published by G. Govi in
       Vol. V, Ser. 3a, of _Transunti, Reale Accademia dei Linea, sed. del
       5 Giugno, 1881,_ with the following introductory note: _"Desidero
       intanto che siano stampati questi pochi frammenti perche so che sono
       stati trascritti ultimamente, e verranno messi in luce tra poco
       fuori d'Italia. Li ripubblichi pure chi vuole, ma si sappia almeno
       che anche tra noi si conoscevano, e s'eran raccolti da anni per
       comporne, quando che fosse, una edizione ordinata degli scritti di
       Leonardo."_
       The learned editor has left out line 22 and has written 3 _pie_ for
       8 _piedi_ in line 25. There are other deviations of less importance
       from the original.]
       A courser, as large as life, with the rider requires for the cost of
       the metal, duc. 500.
       And for cost of the iron work which is inside the model, and
       charcoal, and wood, and the pit to cast it in, and for binding the
       mould, and including the furnace where it is to be cast ... duc.
       200.
       To make the model in clay and then in wax......... duc. 432.
       To the labourers for polishing it when it is cast. ....... duc. 450.
       in all. . duc. 1582.
       [12] Cost of the marble of the monument [14].
       Cost of the marble according to the drawing. The piece of marble
       under the horse which is 4 braccia long, 2 braccia and 2 inches wide
       and 9 inches thick 58 hundredweight, at 4 Lire and 10 Soldi per
       hundredweight.. duc. 58.
       And for 13 braccia and 6 inches of cornice, 7 in. wide and 4 in.
       thick, 24 hundredweight....... duc. 24.
       And for the frieze and architrave, which is 4 br. and 6 in. long, 2
       br. wide and 6 in. thick, 29 hundredweight., duc. 20.
       And for the capitals made of metal, which are 8, 5 inches in. square
       and 2 in. thick, at the price of 15 ducats each, will come to......
       duc. 122.
       And for 8 columns of 2 br. 7 in., 4 1/2 in. thick, 20 hundredweight
       duc. 20.
       And for 8 bases which are 5 1/2 in. square and 2 in. high 5 hund'..
       duc. 5.
       And for the slab of the tombstone 4 br. io in. long, 2 br. 4 1/2 in.
       wide 36 hundredweight....... duc. 36.
       And for 8 pedestal feet each 8 br. long and 6 1/2 in. wide and 6 1/2
       in. thick, 20 hundredweight come to... duc. 20.
       And for the cornice below which is 4 br. and 10 in. long, and 2 br.
       and 5 in. wide, and 4 in. thick, 32 hund'.. duc. 32.
       And for the stone of which the figure of the deceased is to be made
       which is 3 br. and 8 in. long, and 1 br. and 6 in. wide, and 9 in.
       thick, 30 hund'.. duc. 30.
       And for the stone on which the figure lies which is 3 br. and 4 in.
       long and 1 br. and 2 in., wide and 4 1/2 in. thick duc. 16.
       And for the squares of marble placed between the pedestals which are
       8 and are 9 br. long and 9 in. wide, and 3 in. thick, 8
       hundredweight . . . duc. 8. in all. . duc. 389.
       [33]Cost of the work in marble[35].
       Round the base on which the horse stands there are 8 figures at 25
       ducats each ............ duc. 200.
       And on the same base there are 8 festoons with some other ornaments,
       and of these there are 4 at the price of 15 ducats each, and 4 at
       the price of 8 ducats each ....... duc. 92.
       And for squaring the stones duc. 6.
       Again, for the large cornice which goes below the base on which the
       horse stands, which is 13 br. and 6 in., at 2 due. per br. ......
       duc. 27.
       And for 12 br. of frieze at 5 due. per br. ........... duc. 60.
       And for 12 br. of architrave at 1 1/2 duc. per br. ....... duc. 18.
       And for 3 rosettes which will be the soffit of the monument, at 20
       ducats each .......... duc. 60.
       And for 8 fluted columns at 8 ducats each ......... duc. 64.
       And for 8 bases at 1 ducat each, duc. 8.
       And for 8 pedestals, of which 4 are at 10 duc. each, which go above
       the angles; and 4 at 6 duc. each .. duc. 64.
       And for squaring and carving the moulding of the pedestals at 2 duc.
       each, and there are 8 .... duc. 16.
       And for 6 square blocks with figures and trophies, at 25 duc. each
       .. duc. 150.
       And for carving the moulding of the stone under the figure of the
       deceased .......... duc. 40.
       For the statue of the deceased, to do it well .......... duc. 100.
       For 6 harpies with candelabra, at 25 ducats each ......... duc. 150.
       For squaring the stone on which the statue lies, and carving the
       moulding ............ duc. 20.
       in all .. duc. 1075.
       The sum total of every thing added together amount to ...... duc.
       3046.
       726.
       MINT AT ROME.
       It can also be made without a spring. But the screw above must
       always be joined to the part of the movable sheath: [Margin note:
       The mint of Rome.] [Footnote: See Pl. LXXVI. This passage is taken
       from a note book which can be proved to have been used in Rome.]
       All coins which do not have the rim complete, are not to be accepted
       as good; and to secure the perfection of their rim it is requisite
       that, in the first place, all the coins should be a perfect circle;
       and to do this a coin must before all be made perfect in weight, and
       size, and thickness. Therefore have several plates of metal made of
       the same size and thickness, all drawn through the same gauge so as
       to come out in strips. And out of [24] these strips you will stamp
       the coins, quite round, as sieves are made for sorting chestnuts
       [27]; and these coins can then be stamped in the way indicated
       above; &c.
       [31] The hollow of the die must be uniformly wider than the lower,
       but imperceptibly [35].
       This cuts the coins perfectly round and of the exact thickness, and
       weight; and saves the man who cuts and weighs, and the man who makes
       the coins round. Hence it passes only through the hands of the
       gauger and of the stamper, and the coins are very superior.
       [Footnote: See Pl. LXXVI No. 2. The text of lines 31-35 stands
       parallel 1. 24-27.
       Farther evidence of Leonardo's occupations and engagements at Rome
       under Pope Leo X. may be gathered from some rough copies of letters
       which will be found in this volume. Hitherto nothing has been known
       of his work in Rome beyond some doubtful, and perhaps mythical,
       statements in Vasari.]
       727.
       POWDER FOR MEDALS.
       The incombustible growth of soot on wicks reduced to powder, burnt
       tin and all the metals, alum, isinglass, smoke from a brass forge,
       each ingredient to be moistened, with aqua vitae or malmsey or
       strong malt vinegar, white wine or distilled extract of turpentine,
       or oil; but there should be little moisture, and cast in moulds.
       [Margin note: On the coining of medals (727. 728).] [Footnote: The
       meaning of _scagliuolo_ in this passage is doubtful.]
       728.
       OF TAKING CASTS OF MEDALS.
       A paste of emery mixed with aqua vitae, or iron filings with
       vinegar, or ashes of walnut leaves, or ashes of straw very finely
       powdered.
       [Footnote: The meaning of _scagliuolo_ in this passage is doubtful.]
       The diameter is given in the lead enclosed; it is beaten with a
       hammer and several times extended; the lead is folded and kept
       wrapped up in parchment so that the powder may not be spilt; then
       melt the lead, and the powder will be on the top of the melted lead,
       which must then be rubbed between two plates of steel till it is
       thoroughly pulverised; then wash it with aqua fortis, and the
       blackness of the iron will be dissolved leaving the powder clean.
       Emery in large grains may be broken by putting it on a cloth many
       times doubled, and hit it sideways with the hammer, when it will
       break up; then mix it little by little and it can be founded with
       ease; but if you hold it on the anvil you will never break it, when
       it is large.
       Any one who grinds smalt should do it on plates of tempered steel
       with a cone shaped grinder; then put it in aqua fortis, which melts
       away the steel that may have been worked up and mixed with the
       smalt, and which makes it black; it then remains purified and clean;
       and if you grind it on porphyry the porphyry will work up and mix
       with the smalt and spoil it, and aqua fortis will never remove it
       because it cannot dissolve the porphyry.
       If you want a fine blue colour dissolve the smalt made with tartar,
       and then remove the salt.
       Vitrified brass makes a fine red.
       729.
       STUCCO.
       Place stucco over the prominence of the..... which may be composed
       of Venus and Mercury, and lay it well over that prominence of the
       thickness of the side of a knife, made with the ruler and cover this
       with the bell of a still, and you will have again the moisture with
       which you applied the paste. The rest you may dry [Margin note: On
       stucco (729. 730).] [Footnote: In this passage a few words have been
       written in a sort of cipher--that is to say backwards; as in l. 3
       _erenev_ for _Venere_, l. 4 _oirucrem_ for Mercurio, l. 12 _il
       orreve co ecarob_ for _il everro (?) co borace_. The meaning of the
       word before _"di giesso"_ in l. 1 is unknown; and the sense, in
       which _sagoma_ is used here and in other passages is obscure.--
       _Venere_ and _Mercurio_ may mean 'marble' and 'lime', of which
       stucco is composed.
       12. The meaning of _orreve_ is unknown.]
       well; afterwards fire it, and beat it or burnish it with a good
       burnisher, and make it thick towards the side.
       STUCCO.
       Powder ... with borax and water to a paste, and make stucco of it,
       and then heat it so that it may dry, and then varnish it, with fire,
       so that it shines well.
       730.
       STUCCO FOR MOULDING.
       Take of butter 6 parts, of wax 2 parts, and as much fine flour as
       when put with these 2 things melted, will make them as firm as wax
       or modelling clay.
       GLUE.
       Take mastic, distilled turpentine and white lead.
       On bronze casting generally (731-740)
       731.
       TO CAST.
       Tartar burnt and powdered with plaster and cast cause the plaster to
       hold together when it is mixed up again; and then it will dissolve
       in water.
       732.
       TO CAST BRONZE IN PLASTER.
       Take to every 2 cups of plaster 1 of ox-horns burnt, mix them
       together and make your cast with it.
       733.
       When you want to take a cast in wax, burn the scum with a candle,
       and the cast will come out without bubbles.
       734.
       2 ounces of plaster to a pound of metal;-- walnut, which makes it
       like the curve.
       [Footnote: The second part of this is quite obscure.]
       735.
       [Dried earth 16 pounds, 100 pounds of metal wet clay 20,--of wet
       100,-half,- which increases 4 Ibs. of water,--1 of wax, 1 Ib. of
       metal, a little less,-the scrapings of linen with earth, measure for
       measure.] [Footnote: The translation is given literally, but the
       meaning is quite obscure.]
       736.
       Such as the mould is, so will the cast be.
       737.
       HOW CASTS OUGHT TO BE POLISHED.
       Make a bunch of iron wire as thick as thread, and scrub them with
       [this and] water; hold a bowl underneath that it may not make a mud
       below.
       HOW TO REMOVE THE ROUGH EDGES FROM BRONZE.
       Make an iron rod, after the manner of a large chisel, and with this
       rub over those seams on the bronze which remain on the casts of the
       guns, and which are caused by the joins in the mould; but make the
       tool heavy enough, and let the strokes be long and broad.
       TO FACILITATE MELTING.
       First alloy part of the metal in the crucible, then put it in the
       furnace, and this being in a molten state will assist in beginning
       to melt the copper.
       TO PREVENT THE COPPER COOLING IN THE FURNACE.
       When the copper cools in the furnace, be ready, as soon as you
       perceive it, to cut it with a long stick while it is still in a
       paste; or if it is quite cold cut it as lead is cut with broad and
       large chisels.
       IF YOU HAVE TO MAKE A LARGE CAST.
       If you have to make a cast of a hundred thousand pounds do it with
       two furnaces and with 2000 pounds in each, or as much as 3000 pounds
       at most.
       738.
       HOW TO PROCEED TO BREAK A LARGE MASS OF BRONZE.
       If you want to break up a large mass of bronze, first suspend it,
       and then make round it a wall on the four sides, like a trough of
       bricks, and make a great fire therein. When it is quite red hot give
       it a blow with a heavy weight raised above it, and with great force.
       739.
       TO COMBINE LEAD WITH OTHER METAL.
       If you wish for economy in combining lead with the metal in order to
       lessen the amount of tin which is necessary in the metal, first
       alloy the lead with the tin and then add the molten copper.
       How TO MELT [METAL] IN A FURNACE.
       The furnace should be between four well founded pillars.
       OF THE THICKNESS OF THE COATING.
       The coating should not be more than two fingers thick, it should be
       laid on in four thicknesses over fine clay and then well fixed, and
       it should be fired only on the inside and then carefully covered
       with ashes and cow's dung.
       OF THE THICKNESS OF THE GUN.
       The gun being made to carry 600 Ibs. of ball and more, by this rule
       you will take the measure of the diameter of the ball and divide it
       into 6 parts and one of these parts will be its thickness at the
       muzzle; but at the breech it must always be half. And if the ball is
       to be 700 lbs., 1/7th of the diameter of the ball must be its
       thickness in front; and if the ball is to be 800, the eighth of its
       diameter in front; and if 900, 1/8th and 1/2 [3/16], and if 1000,
       1/9th.
       OF THE LENGTH OF THE BODY OF THE GUN.
       If you want it to throw a ball of stone, make the length of the gun
       to be 6, or as much as 7 diameters of the ball; and if the ball is
       to be of iron make it as much as 12 balls, and if the ball is to be
       of lead, make it as much as 18 balls. I mean when the gun is to have
       the mouth fitted to receive 600 lbs. of stone ball, and more.
       OF THE THICKNESS OF SMALL GUNS.
       The thickness at the muzzle of small guns should be from a half to
       one third of the diameter of the ball, and the length from 30 to 36
       balls.
       740.
       OF LUTING THE FURNACE WITHIN.
       The furnace must be luted before you put the metal in it, with earth
       from Valenza, and over that with ashes.
       [Footnote 1. 2.: _Terra di Valenza_.--Valenza is north of
       Alessandria on the Po.]
       OF RESTORING THE METAL WHEN IT IS BECOMING COOL.
       When you see that the bronze is congealing take some willow-wood cut
       in small chips and make up the fire with it.
       THE CAUSE OF ITS CURDLING.
       I say that the cause of this congealing often proceeds from too much
       fire, or from ill-dried wood.
       TO KNOW THE CONDITION OF THE FIRE.
       You may know when the fire is good and fit for your purpose by a
       clear flame, and if you see the tips of the flames dull and ending
       in much smoke do not trust it, and particularly when the flux metal
       is almost fluid.
       OF ALLOYING THE METAL.
       Metal for guns must invariably be made with 6 or even 8 per cent,
       that is 6 of tin to one hundred of copper, for the less you put in,
       the stronger will the gun be.
       WHEN THE TIN SHOULD BE ADDED TO THE COPPER.
       The tin should be put in with the copper when the copper is reduced
       to a fluid.
       HOW TO HASTEN THE MELTING.
       You can hasten the melting when 2/3ds of the copper is fluid; you
       can then, with a stick of chestnut-wood, repeatedly stir what of
       copper remains entire amidst what is melted.
       _Introductory Observations on the Architectural Designs (XII), and
       Writings on Architecture (XIII)._
       _Until now very little has been known regarding Leonardo's labours
       in the domain of Architecture. No building is known to have been
       planned and executed by him, though by some contemporary writers
       incidental allusion is made to his occupying himself with
       architecture, and his famous letter to Lodovico il Moro,--which has
       long been a well-known document,--in which he offers his service as
       an architect to that prince, tends to confirm the belief that he was
       something more than an amateur of the art. This hypothesis has
       lately been confirmed by the publication of certain documents,
       preserved at Milan, showing that Leonardo was not only employed in
       preparing plans but that he took an active part, with much credit,
       as member of a commission on public buildings; his name remains
       linked with the history of the building of the Cathedral at Pavia
       and that of the Cathedral at Milan._
       _Leonardo's writings on Architecture are dispersed among a large
       number of MSS., and it would be scarcely possible to master their
       contents without the opportunity of arranging, sorting and comparing
       the whole mass of materials, so as to have some comprehensive idea
       of the whole. The sketches, when isolated and considered by
       themselves, might appear to be of but little value; it is not till
       we understand their general purport, from comparing them with each
       other, that we can form any just estimate of their true worth._
       _Leonardo seems to have had a project for writing a complete and
       separate treatise on Architecture, such as his predecessors and
       contemporaries had composed--Leon Battista Alberti, Filarete,
       Francesco di Giorgio and perhaps also Bramante. But, on the other
       hand, it cannot be denied that possibly no such scheme was connected
       with the isolated notes and researches, treating on special
       questions, which are given in this work; that he was merely working
       at problems in which, for some reason or other he took a special
       interest._
       _A great number of important buildings were constructed in Lombardy
       during the period between 1472 and 1499, and among them there are
       several by unknown architects, of so high an artistic merit, that it
       is certainly not improbable that either Bramante or Leonardo da
       Vinci may have been, directly or indirectly, concerned in their
       erection._
       _Having been engaged, for now nearly twenty years, in a thorough
       study of Bramante's life and labours, I have taken a particular
       interest in detecting the distinguishing marks of his style as
       compared with Leonardo's. In 1869 I made researches about the
       architectural drawings of the latter in the Codex Atlanticus at
       Milan, for the purpose of finding out, if possible the original
       plans and sketches of the churches of Santa Maria delle Grazie at
       Milan, and of the Cathedral at Pavia, which buildings have been
       supposed to be the work both of Bramante and of Leonardo. Since 1876
       I have repeatedly examined Leonardo's architectural studies in the
       collection of his manuscripts in the Institut de France, and some of
       these I have already given to the public in my work on_ "Les Projets
       Primitifs pour la Basilique de St. Pierre de Rome", _P1. 43. In 1879
       I had the opportunity of examining the manuscript in the Palazzo
       Trivulzio at Milan, and in 1880 Dr Richter showed me in London the
       manuscripts in the possession of Lord Ashburnham, and those in the
       British Museum. I have thus had opportunities of seeing most of
       Leonardo's architectural drawings in the original, but of the
       manuscripts tliemselves I have deciphered only the notes which
       accompany the sketches. It is to Dr Richter's exertions that we owe
       the collected texts on Architecture which are now published, and
       while he has undertaken to be responsible for the correct reading of
       the original texts, he has also made it his task to extract the
       whole of the materials from the various MSS. It has been my task to
       arrange and elucidate the texts under the heads which have been
       adopted in this work. MS. B. at Paris and the Codex Atlanticus at
       Milan are the chief sources of our knowledge of Leonardo as an
       architect, and I have recently subjected these to a thorough
       re-investigation expressly with a view to this work._
       _A complete reproduction of all Leonardo's architectural sketches
       has not, indeed, been possible, but as far as the necessarily
       restricted limits of the work have allowed, the utmost completeness
       has been aimed at, and no efforts have been spared to include every
       thing that can contribute to a knowledge of Leonardo's style. It
       would have been very interesting, if it had been possible, to give
       some general account at least of Leonardo's work and studies in
       engineering, fortification, canal-making and the like, and it is
       only on mature reflection that we have reluctantly abandoned this
       idea. Leonardo's occupations in these departments have by no means
       so close a relation to literary work, in the strict sense of the
       word as we are fairly justified in attributing to his numerous notes
       on Architecture._
       _Leonardo's architectural studies fall naturally under two heads:_
       _I. Those drawings and sketches, often accompanied by short remarks
       and explanations, which may be regarded as designs for buildings or
       monuments intended to be built. With these there are occasionally
       explanatory texts._
       _II. Theoretical investigations and treatises. A special interest
       attaches to these because they discuss a variety of questions which
       are of practical importance to this day. Leonardo's theory as to the
       origin and progress of cracks in buildings is perhaps to be
       considered as unique in its way in the literature of Architecture._
       _HENRY DE GEYMULLER_ _