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Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci, The
VOLUME II   VOLUME II - SECTION XV. ASTRONOMY
Leonardo da Vinci
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       _
       VOLUME II - SECTION XV. ASTRONOMY
       _Ever since the publication by Venturi in_ 1797 _and Libri in_ 1840
       _of some few passages of Leonardo's astronomical notes, scientific
       astronomers have frequently expressed the opinion, that they must
       have been based on very important discoveries, and that the great
       painter also deserved a conspicuous place in the history of this
       science. In the passages here printed, a connected view is given of
       his astronomical studies as they lie scattered through the
       manuscripts, which have come down to us. Unlike his other purely
       scientific labours, Leonardo devotes here a good deal of attention
       to the opinions of the ancients, though he does not follow the
       practice universal in his day of relying on them as authorities; he
       only quotes them, as we shall see, in order to refute their
       arguments. His researches throughout have the stamp of independent
       thought. There is nothing in these writings to lead us to suppose
       that they were merely an epitome of the general learning common to
       the astronomers of the period. As early as in the XIVth century
       there were chairs of astronomy in the universities of Padua and
       Bologna, but so late as during the entire XVIth century Astronomy
       and Astrology were still closely allied._
       _It is impossible now to decide whether Leonardo, when living in
       Florence, became acquainted in his youth with the doctrines of Paolo
       Toscanelli the great astronomer and mathematician (died_ 1482_), of
       whose influence and teaching but little is now known, beyond the
       fact that he advised and encouraged Columbus to carry out his
       project of sailing round the world. His name is nowhere mentioned by
       Leonardo, and from the dates of the manuscripts from which the texts
       on astronomy are taken, it seems highly probable that Leonardo
       devoted his attention to astronomical studies less in his youth than
       in his later years. It was evidently his purpose to treat of
       Astronomy in a connected form and in a separate work (see the
       beginning of Nos._ 866 _and_ 892_; compare also No._ 1167_). It is
       quite in accordance with his general scientific thoroughness that he
       should propose to write a special treatise on Optics as an
       introduction to Astronomy (see Nos._ 867 _and_ 877_). Some of the
       chapters belonging to this Section bear the title "Prospettiva"
       _(see Nos._ 869 _and_ 870_), this being the term universally applied
       at the time to Optics as well as Perspective (see Vol. I, p._ 10,
       _note to No._ 13, _l._ 10_)_.
       _At the beginning of the XVIth century the Ptolemaic theory of the
       universe was still universally accepted as the true one, and
       Leonardo conceives of the earth as fixed, with the moon and sun
       revolving round it, as they are represented in the diagram to No._
       897. _He does not go into any theory of the motions of the planets;
       with regard to these and the fixed stars he only investigates the
       phenomena of their luminosity. The spherical form of the earth he
       takes for granted as an axiom from the first, and he anticipates
       Newton by pointing out the universality of Gravitation not merely in
       the earth, but even in the moon. Although his acute research into
       the nature of the moon's light and the spots on the moon did not
       bring to light many results of lasting importance beyond making it
       evident that they were a refutation of the errors of his
       contemporaries, they contain various explanations of facts which
       modern science need not modify in any essential point, and
       discoveries which history has hitherto assigned to a very much later
       date_.
       _The ingenious theory by which he tries to explain the nature of
       what is known as earth shine, the reflection of the sun's rays by
       the earth towards the moon, saying that it is a peculiar refraction,
       originating in the innumerable curved surfaces of the waves of the
       sea may be regarded as absurd; but it must not be forgotten that he
       had no means of detecting the fundamental error on which he based
       it, namely: the assumption that the moon was at a relatively short
       distance from the earth. So long as the motion of the earth round
       the sun remained unknown, it was of course impossible to form any
       estimate of the moon's distance from the earth by a calculation of
       its parallax_.
       _Before the discovery of the telescope accurate astronomical
       observations were only possible to a very limited extent. It would
       appear however from certain passages in the notes here printed for
       the first time, that Leonardo was in a position to study the spots
       in the moon more closely than he could have done with the unaided
       eye. So far as can be gathered from the mysterious language in which
       the description of his instrument is wrapped, he made use of
       magnifying glasses; these do not however seem to have been
       constructed like a telescope--telescopes were first made about_
       1600. _As LIBRI pointed out_ (Histoire des Sciences mathematiques
       III, 101) _Fracastoro of Verona_ (1473-1553) _succeeded in
       magnifying the moon's face by an arrangement of lenses (compare No._
       910, _note), and this gives probability to Leonardo's invention at a
       not much earlier date._
       I.
       THE EARTH AS A PLANET.
       The earth's place in the universe (857-858)
       857.
       The equator, the line of the horizon, the ecliptic, the meridian:
       These lines are those which in all their parts are equidistant from
       the centre of the globe.
       858.
       The earth is not in the centre of the Sun's orbit nor at the centre
       of the universe, but in the centre of its companion elements, and
       united with them. And any one standing on the moon, when it and the
       sun are both beneath us, would see this our earth and the element of
       water upon it just as we see the moon, and the earth would light it
       as it lights us.
       The fundamental laws of the solar system (859-864)
       859.
       Force arises from dearth or abundance; it is the child of physical
       motion, and the grand-child of spiritual motion, and the mother and
       origin of gravity. Gravity is limited to the elements of water and
       earth; but this force is unlimited, and by it infinite worlds might
       be moved if instruments could be made by which the force could be
       generated.
       Force, with physical motion, and gravity, with resistance are the
       four external powers on which all actions of mortals depend.
       Force has its origin in spiritual motion; and this motion, flowing
       through the limbs of sentient animals, enlarges their muscles. Being
       enlarged by this current the muscles are shrunk in length and
       contract the tendons which are connected with them, and this is the
       cause of the force of the limbs in man.
       The quality and quantity of the force of a man are able to give
       birth to other forces, which will be proportionally greater as the
       motions produced by them last longer.
       [Footnote: Only part of this passage belongs, strictly speaking, to
       this section. The principle laid down in the second paragraph is
       more directly connected with the notes given in the preceding
       section on Physiology.]
       860.
       Why does not the weight _o_ remain in its place? It does not remain
       because it has no resistance. Where will it move to? It will move
       towards the centre [of gravity]. And why by no other line? Because a
       weight which has no support falls by the shortest road to the lowest
       point which is the centre of the world. And why does the weight know
       how to find it by so short a line? Because it is not independant and
       does not move about in various directions.
       [Footnote: This text and the sketch belonging to it, are reproduced
       on Pl. CXXI.]
       861.
       Let the earth turn on which side it may the surface of the waters
       will never move from its spherical form, but will always remain
       equidistant from the centre of the globe.
       Granting that the earth might be removed from the centre of the
       globe, what would happen to the water?
       It would remain in a sphere round that centre equally thick, but the
       sphere would have a smaller diameter than when it enclosed the earth.
       [Footnote: Compare No. 896, lines 48-64; and No. 936.]
       862.
       Supposing the earth at our antipodes which supports the ocean were
       to rise and stand uncovered, far out of the sea, but remaining
       almost level, by what means afterwards, in the course of time, would
       mountains and vallies be formed?
       And the rocks with their various strata?
       863.
       Each man is always in the middle of the surface of the earth and
       under the zenith of his own hemisphere, and over the centre of the
       earth.
       864.
       Mem.: That I must first show the distance of the sun from the earth;
       and, by means of a ray passing through a small hole into a dark
       chamber, detect its real size; and besides this, by means of the
       aqueous sphere calculate the size of the globe ...
       Here it will be shown, that when the sun is in the meridian of our
       hemisphere [Footnote 10: _Antipodi orientali cogli occidentali_. The
       word _Antipodes_ does not here bear its literal sense, but--as we
       may infer from the simultaneous reference to inhabitants of the
       North and South-- is used as meaning men living at a distance of 90
       degrees from the zenith of the rational horizon of each observer.],
       the antipodes to the East and to the West, alike, and at the same
       time, see the sun mirrored in their waters; and the same is equally
       true of the arctic and antarctic poles, if indeed they are
       inhabited.
       How to prove that the earth is a planet (865-867)
       865.
       That the earth is a star.
       866.
       In your discourse you must prove that the earth is a star much like
       the moon, and the glory of our universe; and then you must treat of
       the size of various stars, according to the authors.
       867.
       THE METHOD OF PROVING THAT THE EARTH IS A STAR.
       First describe the eye; then show how the twinkling of a star is
       really in the eye and why one star should twinkle more than another,
       and how the rays from the stars originate in the eye; and add, that
       if the twinkling of the stars were really in the stars --as it seems
       to be--that this twinkling appears to be an extension as great as
       the diameter of the body of the star; therefore, the star being
       larger than the earth, this motion effected in an instant would be a
       rapid doubling of the size of the star. Then prove that the surface
       of the air where it lies contiguous to fire, and the surface of the
       fire where it ends are those into which the solar rays penetrate,
       and transmit the images of the heavenly bodies, large when they
       rise, and small, when they are on the meridian. Let _a_ be the earth
       and _n d m_ the surface of the air in contact with the sphere of
       fire; _h f g_ is the orbit of the moon or, if you please, of the
       sun; then I say that when the sun appears on the horizon _g_, its
       rays are seen passing through the surface of the air at a slanting
       angle, that is _o m_; this is not the case at _d k_. And so it
       passes through a greater mass of air; all of _e m_ is a denser
       atmosphere.
       868.
       Beyond the sun and us there is darkness and so the air appears blue.
       [Footnote: Compare Vol. I, No. 301.]
       869.
       PERSPECTIVE.
       It is possible to find means by which the eye shall not see remote
       objects as much diminished as in natural perspective, which
       diminishes them by reason of the convexity of the eye which
       necessarily intersects, at its surface, the pyramid of every image
       conveyed to the eye at a right angle on its spherical surface. But
       by the method I here teach in the margin [9] these pyramids are
       intersected at right angles close to the surface of the pupil. The
       convex pupil of the eye can take in the whole of our hemisphere,
       while this will show only a single star; but where many small stars
       transmit their images to the surface of the pupil those stars are
       extremely small; here only one star is seen but it will be large.
       And so the moon will be seen larger and its spots of a more defined
       form [Footnote 20 and fol.: Telescopes were not in use till a century
       later. Compare No. 910 and page 136.]. You must place close to the
       eye a glass filled with the water of which mention is made in number
       4 of Book 113 "On natural substances" [Footnote 23: _libro_ 113.
       This is perhaps the number of a book in some library catalogue. But
       it may refer, on the other hand, to one of the 120 Books mentioned
       in No. 796. l. 84.]; for this water makes objects which are enclosed
       in balls of crystalline glass appear free from the glass.
       OF THE EYE.
       Among the smaller objects presented to the pupil of the eye, that
       which is closest to it, will be least appreciable to the eye. And at
       the same time, the experiments here made with the power of sight,
       show that it is not reduced to speck if the &c. [32][Footnote 32:
       Compare with this the passage in Vol. I, No. 52, written about
       twenty years earlier.].
       Read in the margin.
       [34]Those objects are seen largest which come to the eye at the
       largest angles.
       But the images of the objects conveyed to the pupil of the eye are
       distributed to the pupil exactly as they are distributed in the air:
       and the proof of this is in what follows; that when we look at the
       starry sky, without gazing more fixedly at one star than another,
       the sky appears all strewn with stars; and their proportions to the
       eye are the same as in the sky and likewise the spaces between them
       [61].
       [Footnote: 9. 32. _in margine:_ lines 34-61 are, in the original,
       written on the margin and above them is the diagram to which
       Leonardo seems to refer here.]
       870.
       PERSPECTIVE.
       Among objects moved from the eye at equal distance, that undergoes
       least diminution which at first was most remote.
       When various objects are removed at equal distances farther from
       their original position, that which was at first the farthest from
       the eye will diminish least. And the proportion of the diminution
       will be in proportion to the relative distance of the objects from
       the eye before they were removed.
       That is to say in the object _t_ and the object _e_ the proportion
       of their distances from the eye _a_ is quintuple. I remove each from
       its place and set it farther from the eye by one of the 5 parts into
       which the proposition is divided. Hence it happens that the nearest
       to the eye has doubled the distance and according to the last
       proposition but one of this, is diminished by the half of its whole
       size; and the body _e_, by the same motion, is diminished 1/5 of its
       whole size. Therefore, by that same last proposition but one, that
       which is said in this last proposition is true; and this I say of
       the motions of the celestial bodies which are more distant by 3500
       miles when setting than when overhead, and yet do not increase or
       diminish in any sensible degree.
       871.
       _a b_ is the aperture through which the sun passes, and if you could
       measure the size of the solar rays at _n m_, you could accurately
       trace the real lines of the convergence of the solar rays, the
       mirror being at _a b_, and then show the reflected rays at equal
       angles to _n m_; but, as you want to have them at _n m_, take them
       at the. inner side of the aperture at cd, where they maybe measured
       at the spot where the solar rays fall. Then place your mirror at the
       distance _a b_, making the rays _d b_, _c a_ fall and then be
       reflected at equal angles towards _c d_; and this is the best
       method, but you must use this mirror always in the same month, and
       the same day, and hour and instant, and this will be better than at
       no fixed time because when the sun is at a certain distance it
       produces a certain pyramid of rays.
       872.
       _a_, the side of the body in light and shade _b_, faces the whole
       portion of the hemisphere bed _e f_, and does not face any part of
       the darkness of the earth. And the same occurs at the point _o_;
       therefore the space a _o_ is throughout of one and the same
       brightness, and s faces only four degrees of the hemisphere _d e f g
       h_, and also the whole of the earth _s h_, which will render it
       darker; and how much must be demonstrated by calculation. [Footnote:
       This passage, which has perhaps a doubtful right to its place in
       this connection, stands in the Manuscript between those given in
       Vol. I as No. 117 and No. 427.]
       873.
       THE REASON OF THE INCREASED SIZE OF THE SUN IN THE WEST.
       Some mathematicians explain that the sun looks larger as it sets,
       because the eye always sees it through a denser atmosphere, alleging
       that objects seen through mist or through water appear larger. To
       these I reply: No; because objects seen through a mist are similar
       in colour to those at a distance; but not being similarly diminished
       they appear larger. Again, nothing increases in size in smooth
       water; and the proof of this may be seen by throwing a light on a
       board placed half under water. But the reason why the sun looks
       larger is that every luminous body appears larger in proportion as
       it is more remote. [Footnote: Lines 5 and 6 are thus rendered by M.
       RAVAISSON in his edition of MS. A. "_De meme, aucune chose ne croit
       dans l'eau plane, et tu en feras l'experience_ en calquant un ais
       sous l'eau."--Compare the diagrams in Vol. I, p. 114.]
       On the luminosity of the Earth in the universal space (874-878)
       874.
       In my book I propose to show, how the ocean and the other seas must,
       by means of the sun, make our world shine with the appearance of a
       moon, and to the remoter worlds it looks like a star; and this I
       shall prove.
       Show, first that every light at a distance from the eye throws out
       rays which appear to increase the size of the luminous body; and
       from this it follows that 2 ...[Footnote 10: Here the text breaks
       off; lines 11 and fol. are written in the margin.].
       [11]The moon is cold and moist. Water is cold and moist. Thus our
       seas must appear to the moon as the moon does to us.
       875.
       The waves in water magnify the image of an object reflected in it.
       Let _a_ be the sun, and _n m_ the ruffled water, _b_ the image of
       the sun when the water is smooth. Let _f_ be the eye which sees the
       image in all the waves included within the base of the triangle _c e
       f_. Now the sun reflected in the unruffled surface occupied the
       space _c d_, while in the ruffled surface it covers all the watery
       space _c e_ (as is proved in the 4th of my "Perspective") [Footnote
       9: _Nel quarto della mia prospettiva_. If this reference is to the
       diagrams accompanying the text--as is usual with Leonardo--and not
       to some particular work, the largest of the diagrams here given must
       be meant. It is the lowest and actually the fifth, but he would have
       called it the fourth, for the text here given is preceded on the
       same page of the manuscript by a passage on whirlpools, with the
       diagram belonging to it also reproduced here. The words _della mia
       prospettiva_ may therefore indicate that the diagram to the
       preceding chapter treating on a heterogeneal subject is to be
       excluded. It is a further difficulty that this diagram belongs
       properly to lines 9-10 and not to the preceding sentence. The
       reflection of the sun in water is also discussed in the Theoretical
       part of the Book on Painting; see Vol. I, No. 206, 207.] and it will
       cover more of the water in proportion as the reflected image is
       remote from the eye [10].
       [Footnote: In the original sketch, inside the circle in the first
       diagram, is written _Sole_ (sun), and to the right of it _luna_
       (moon). Thus either of these heavenly bodies may be supposed to fill
       that space. Within the lower circle is written _simulacro_ (image).
       In the two next diagrams at the spot here marked _L_ the word _Luna_
       is written, and in the last _sole_ is written in the top circle at
       _a_.]
       The image of the sun will be more brightly shown in small waves than
       in large ones--and this is because the reflections or images of the
       sun are more numerous in the small waves than in large ones, and the
       more numerous reflections of its radiance give a larger light than
       the fewer.
       Waves which intersect like the scales of a fir cone reflect the
       image of the sun with the greatest splendour; and this is the case
       because the images are as many as the ridges of the waves on which
       the sun shines, and the shadows between these waves are small and
       not very dark; and the radiance of so many reflections together
       becomes united in the image which is transmitted to the eye, so that
       these shadows are imperceptible.
       That reflection of the sun will cover most space on the surface of
       the water which is most remote from the eye which sees it.
       Let _a_ be the sun, _p q_ the reflection of the sun; _a b_ is the
       surface of the water, in which the sun is mirrored, and _r_ the eye
       which sees this reflection on the surface of the water occupying the
       space _o m_. _c_ is the eye at a greater distance from the surface
       of the water and also from the reflection; hence this reflection
       covers a larger space of water, by the distance between _n_ and _o_.
       876.
       It is impossible that the side of a spherical mirror, illuminated by
       the sun, should reflect its radiance unless this mirror were
       undulating or filled with bubbles.
       You see here the sun which lights up the moon, a spherical mirror,
       and all of its surface, which faces the sun is rendered radiant.
       Whence it may be concluded that what shines in the moon is water
       like that of our seas, and in waves as that is; and that portion
       which does not shine consists of islands and terra firma.
       This diagram, of several spherical bodies interposed between the eye
       and the sun, is given to show that, just as the reflection of the
       sun is seen in each of these bodies, in the same way that image may
       be seen in each curve of the waves of the sea; and as in these many
       spheres many reflections of the sun are seen, so in many waves there
       are many images, each of which at a great distance is much magnified
       to the eye. And, as this happens with each wave, the spaces
       interposed between the waves are concealed; and, for this reason, it
       looks as though the many suns mirrored in the many waves were but
       one continuous sun; and the shadows,, mixed up with the luminous
       images, render this radiance less brilliant than that of the sun
       mirrored in these waves.
       [Footnote: In the original, at letter _A_ in the diagram "_Sole_"
       (the sun) is written, and at _o_ "_occhio_" (the eye).]
       877.
       This will have before it the treatise on light and shade.
       The edges in the moon will be most strongly lighted and reflect most
       light, because, there, nothing will be visible but the tops of the
       waves of the water [Footnote 5: I have thought it unnecessary to
       reproduce the detailed explanation of the theory of reflection on
       waves contained in the passage which follows this.].
       878.
       The sun will appear larger in moving water or on waves than in still
       water; an example is the light reflected on the strings of a monochord.
       II.
       THE SUN.
       The question of the true and of the apparent size of the sun (879-884)
       879.
       IN PRAISE OF THE SUN.
       If you look at the stars, cutting off the rays (as may be done by
       looking through a very small hole made with the extreme point of a
       very fine needle, placed so as almost to touch the eye), you will
       see those stars so minute that it would seem as though nothing could
       be smaller; it is in fact their great distance which is the reason
       of their diminution, for many of them are very many times larger
       than the star which is the earth with water. Now reflect what this
       our star must look like at such a distance, and then consider how
       many stars might be added--both in longitude and latitude--between
       those stars which are scattered over the darkened sky. But I cannot
       forbear to condemn many of the ancients, who said that the sun was
       no larger than it appears; among these was Epicurus, and I believe
       that he founded his reason on the effects of a light placed in our
       atmosphere equidistant from the centre of the earth. Any one looking
       at it never sees it diminished in size at whatever distance; and the
       rea-
       [Footnote 879-882: What Leonardo says of Epicurus-- who according to
       LEWIS, _The Astronomy of the ancients_, and MADLER, _Geschichte der
       Himmelskunde_, did not devote much attention to the study of
       celestial phenomena--, he probably derived from Book X of Diogenes
       Laertius, whose _Vitae Philosophorum_ was not printed in Greek till
       1533, but the Latin translation appeared in 1475.]
       880.
       sons of its size and power I shall reserve for Book 4. But I wonder
       greatly that Socrates
       [Footnote 2: _Socrates;_ I have little light to throw on this
       reference. Plato's Socrates himself declares on more than one
       occasion that in his youth he had turned his mind to the study of
       celestial phenomena (METEWPA) but not in his later years (see G. C.
       LEWIS, _The Astronomy of the ancients_, page 109; MADLER,
       _Geschichte der Himmelskunde_, page 41). Here and there in Plato's
       writings we find incidental notes on the sun and other heavenly
       bodies. Leonardo may very well have known of these, since the Latin
       version by Ficinus was printed as early as 1491; indeed an undated
       edition exists which may very likely have appeared between 1480--90.
       There is but one passage in Plato, Epinomis (p. 983) where he speaks
       of the physical properties of the sun and says that it is larger
       than the earth.
       Aristotle who goes very fully into the subject says the same. A
       complete edition of Aristotele's works was first printed in Venice
       1495-98, but a Latin version of the Books _De Coelo et Mundo_ and
       _De Physica_ had been printed in Venice as early as in 1483 (H.
       MULLER-STRUBING).]
       should have depreciated that solar body, saying that it was of the
       nature of incandescent stone, and the one who opposed him as to that
       error was not far wrong. But I only wish I had words to serve me to
       blame those who are fain to extol the worship of men more than that
       of the sun; for in the whole universe there is nowhere to be seen a
       body of greater magnitude and power than the sun. Its light gives
       light to all the celestial bodies which are distributed throughout
       the universe; and from it descends all vital force, for the heat
       that is in living beings comes from the soul [vital spark]; and
       there is no other centre of heat and light in the universe as will
       be shown in Book 4; and certainly those who have chosen to worship
       men as gods--as Jove, Saturn, Mars and the like--have fallen into
       the gravest error, seeing that even if a man were as large as our
       earth, he would look no bigger than a little star which appears but
       as a speck in the universe; and seeing again that these men are
       mortal, and putrid and corrupt in their sepulchres.
       Marcellus [Footnote 23: I have no means of identifying _Marcello_
       who is named in the margin. It may be Nonius Marcellus, an obscure
       Roman Grammarian of uncertain date (between the IInd and Vth
       centuries A. C.) the author of the treatise _De compendiosa doctrina
       per litteras ad filium_ in which he treats _de rebus omnibus et
       quibusdam aliis_. This was much read in the middle ages. The _editto
       princeps_ is dated 1470 (H. MULLER-STRUBING).] and many others
       praise the sun.
       881.
       Epicurus perhaps saw the shadows cast by columns on the walls in
       front of them equal in diameter to the columns from which the
       shadows were cast; and the breadth of the shadows being parallel
       from beginning to end, he thought he might infer that the sun also
       was directly opposite to this parallel and that consequently its
       breadth was not greater than that of the column; not perceiving that
       the diminution in the shadow was insensibly slight by reason of the
       remoteness of the sun. If the sun were smaller than the earth, the
       stars on a great portion of our hemisphere would have no light,
       which is evidence against Epicurus who says the sun is only as large
       as it appears.
       [Footnote: In the original the writing is across the diagram.]
       882.
       Epicurus says the sun is the size it looks. Hence as it looks about
       a foot across we must consider that to be its size; it would follow
       that when the moon eclipses the sun, the sun ought not to appear the
       larger, as it does. Then, the moon being smaller than the sun, the
       moon must be less than a foot, and consequently when our world
       eclipses the moon, it must be less than a foot by a finger's
       breadth; inasmuch as if the sun is a foot across, and our earth
       casts a conical shadow on the moon, it is inevitable that the
       luminous cause of the cone of shadow must be larger than the opaque
       body which casts the cone of shadow.
       883.
       To measure how many times the diameter of the sun will go into its
       course in 24 hours.
       Make a circle and place it to face the south, after the manner of a
       sundial, and place a rod in the middle in such a way as that its
       length points to the centre of this circle, and mark the shadow cast
       in the sunshine by this rod on the circumference of the circle, and
       this shadow will be--let us say-- as broad as from _a_ to _n_. Now
       measure how many times this shadow will go into this circumference
       of a circle, and that will give you the number of times that the
       solar body will go into its orbit in 24 hours. Thus you may see
       whether Epicurus was [right in] saying that the sun was only as
       large as it looked; for, as the apparent diameter of the sun is
       about a foot, and as that sun would go a thousand times into the
       length of its course in 24 hours, it would have gone a thousand
       feet, that is 300 braccia, which is the sixth of a mile. Whence it
       would follow that the course of the sun during the day would be the
       sixth part of a mile and that this venerable snail, the sun will
       have travelled 25 braccia an hour.
       884.
       Posidonius composed books on the size of the sun. [Footnote:
       Poseidonius of Apamea, commonly called the Rhodian, because he
       taught in Rhodes, was a Stoic philosopher, a contemporary and friend
       of Cicero's, and the author of numerous works on natural science,
       among them.
       Strabo quotes no doubt from one of his works, when he says that
       Poseidonius explained how it was that the sun looked larger when it
       was rising or setting than during the rest of its course (III, p.
       135). Kleomedes, a later Greek Naturalist also mentions this
       observation of Poseidonius' without naming the title of his work;
       however, as Kleomedes' Cyclia Theorica was not printed till 1535,
       Leonardo must have derived his quotation from Strabo. He probably
       wrote this note in 1508, and as the original Greek was first printed
       in Venice in 1516, we must suppose him to quote here from the
       translation by Guarinus Veronensis, which was printed as early as
       1471, also at Venice (H. MULLER-STRUBING).]
       Of the nature of Sunlight (885)
       885.
       OF THE PROOF THAT THE SUN IS HOT BY NATURE AND NOT BY VIRTUE.
       Of the nature of Sunlight.
       That the heat of the sun resides in its nature and not in its virtue
       [or mode of action] is abundantly proved by the radiance of the
       solar body on which the human eye cannot dwell and besides this no
       less manifestly by the rays reflected from a concave mirror,
       which--when they strike the eye with such splendour that the eye
       cannot bear them--have a brilliancy equal to the sun in its own
       place. And that this is true I prove by the fact that if the mirror
       has its concavity formed exactly as is requisite for the collecting
       and reflecting of these rays, no created being could endure the
       heat that strikes from the reflected rays of such a mirror. And if
       you argue that the mirror itself is cold and yet send forth hot
       rays, I should reply that those rays come really from the sun and
       that it is the ray of the concave mirror after having passed through
       the window.
       Considerations as to the size of the sun (886-891)
       886.
       The sun does not move. [Footnote: This sentence occurs incidentally
       among mathematical notes, and is written in unusually large
       letters.]
       887.
       PROOF THAT THE NEARER YOU ARE TO THE SOURCE OF THE SOLAR RAYS, THE
       LARGER WILL THE REFLECTION OF THE SUN FROM THE SEA APPEAR TO YOU.
       [Footnote: Lines 4 and fol. Compare Vol. I, Nos. 130, 131.] If it is
       from the centre that the sun employs its radiance to intensify the
       power of its whole mass, it is evident that the farther its rays
       extend, the more widely they will be divided; and this being so,
       you, whose eye is near the water that mirrors the sun, see but a
       small portion of the rays of the sun strike the surface of the
       water, and reflecting the form of the sun. But if you were near to
       the sun--as would be the case when the sun is on the meridian and
       the sea to the westward--you would see the sun, mirrored in the sea,
       of a very great size; because, as you are nearer to the sun, your
       eye taking in the rays nearer to the point of radiation takes more
       of them in, and a great splendour is the result. And in this way it
       can be proved that the moon must have seas which reflect the sun,
       and that the parts which do not shine are land.
       888.
       Take the measure of the sun at the solstice in mid-June.
       889.
       WHY THE SUN APPEARS LARGER WHEN SETTING THAN AT NOON, WHEN IT IS
       NEAR TO US.
       Every object seen through a curved medium seems to be of larger size
       than it is.
       [Footnote: At A is written _sole_ (the sun), at B _terra_ (the
       earth).]
       890.
       Because the eye is small it can only see the image of the sun as of
       a small size. If the eye were as large as the sun it would see the
       image of the sun in water of the same size as the real body of the
       sun, so long as the water is smooth.
       891.
       A METHOD OF SEEING THE SUN ECLIPSED WITHOUT PAIN TO THE EYE.
       Take a piece of paper and pierce holes in it with a needle, and look
       at the sun through these holes.
       III.
       THE MOON.
       On the luminousity of the moon (892-901)
       892.
       OF THE MOON.
       As I propose to treat of the nature of the moon, it is necessary
       that first I should describe the perspective of mirrors, whether
       plane, concave or convex; and first what is meant by a luminous ray,
       and how it is refracted by various kinds of media; then, when a
       reflected ray is most powerful, whether when the angle of incidence
       is acute, right, or obtuse, or from a convex, a plane, or a concave
       surface; or from an opaque or a transparent body. Besides this, how
       it is that the solar rays which fall on the waves of the sea, are
       seen by the eye of the same width at the angle nearest to the eye,
       as at the highest line of the waves on the horizon; but
       notwithstanding this the solar rays reflected from the waves of the
       sea assume the pyramidal form and consequently, at each degree of
       distance increase proportionally in size, although to our sight,
       they appear as parallel.
       1st. Nothing that has very little weight is opaque.
       2dly. Nothing that is excessively weighty can remain beneath that
       which is heavier.
       3dly. As to whether the moon is situated in the centre of its
       elements or not.
       And, if it has no proper place of its own, like the earth, in the
       midst of its elements, why does it not fall to the centre of our
       elements? [Footnote 26: The problem here propounded by Leonardo was
       not satisfactorily answered till Newton in 1682 formulated the law
       of universal attraction and gravitation. Compare No. 902, lines
       5-15.]
       And, if the moon is not in the centre of its own elements and yet
       does not fall, it must then be lighter than any other element.
       And, if the moon is lighter than the other elements why is it opaque
       and not transparent?
       When objects of various sizes, being placed at various distances,
       look of equal size, there must be the same relative proportion in
       the distances as in the magnitudes of the objects.
       [Footnote: In the diagram Leonardo wrote _sole_ at the place marked
       _A_.]
       893.
       OF THE MOON AND WHETHER IT IS POLISHED AND SPHERICAL.
       The image of the sun in the moon is powerfully luminous, and is only
       on a small portion of its surface. And the proof may be seen by
       taking a ball of burnished gold and placing it in the dark with a
       light at some distance from it; and then, although it will
       illuminate about half of the ball, the eye will perceive its
       reflection only in a small part of its surface, and all the rest of
       the surface reflects the darkness which surrounds it; so that it is
       only in that spot that the image of the light is seen, and all the
       rest remains invisible, the eye being at a distance from the ball.
       The same thing would happen on the surface of the moon if it were
       polished, lustrous and opaque, like all bodies with a reflecting
       surface.
       Show how, if you were standing on the moon or on a star, our earth
       would seem to reflect the sun as the moon does.
       And show that the image of the sun in the sea cannot appear one and
       undivided, as it appears in a perfectly plane mirror.
       894.
       How shadows are lost at great distances, as is shown by the shadow
       side of the moon which is never seen. [Footnote: Compare also Vol.
       I, Nos. 175-179.]
       895.
       Either the moon has intrinsic luminosity or not. If it has, why does
       it not shine without the aid of the sun? But if it has not any light
       in itself it must of necessity be a spherical mirror; and if it is a
       mirror, is it not proved in Perspective that the image of a luminous
       object will never be equal to the extent of surface of the
       reflecting body that it illuminates? And if it be thus [Footnote 13:
       At A, in the diagram, Leonardo wrote "_sole_" (the sun), and at B
       "_luna o noi terra_" (the moon or our earth). Compare also the text
       of No. 876.], as is here shown at _r s_ in the figure, whence comes
       so great an extent of radiance as that of the full moon as we see
       it, at the fifteenth day of the moon?
       896.
       OF THE MOON.
       The moon has no light in itself; but so much of it as faces the sun
       is illuminated, and of that illumined portion we see so much as
       faces the earth. And the moon's night receives just as much light as
       is lent it by our waters as they reflect the image of the sun, which
       is mirrored in all those waters which are on the side towards the
       sun. The outside or surface of the waters forming the seas of the
       moon and of the seas of our globe is always ruffled little or much,
       or more or less--and this roughness causes an extension of the
       numberless images of the sun which are repeated in the ridges and
       hollows, the sides and fronts of the innumerable waves; that is to
       say in as many different spots on each wave as our eyes find
       different positions to view them from. This could not happen, if the
       aqueous sphere which covers a great part of the moon were uniformly
       spherical, for then the images of the sun would be one to each
       spectator, and its reflections would be separate and independent and
       its radiance would always appear circular; as is plainly to be seen
       in the gilt balls placed on the tops of high buildings. But if those
       gilt balls were rugged or composed of several little balls, like
       mulberries, which are a black fruit composed of minute round
       globules, then each portion of these little balls, when seen in the
       sun, would display to the eye the lustre resulting from the
       reflection of the sun, and thus, in one and the same body many tiny
       suns would be seen; and these often combine at a long distance and
       appear as one. The lustre of the new moon is brighter and stronger,
       than when the moon is full; and the reason of this is that the angle
       of incidence is more obtuse in the new than in the full moon, in
       which the angles [of incidence and reflection] are highly acute. The
       waves of the moon therefore mirror the sun in the hollows of the
       waves as well as on the ridges, and the sides remain in shadow. But
       at the sides of the moon the hollows of the waves do not catch the
       sunlight, but only their crests; and thus the images are fewer and
       more mixed up with the shadows in the hollows; and this
       intermingling of the shaded and illuminated spots comes to the eye
       with a mitigated splendour, so that the edges will be darker,
       because the curves of the sides of the waves are insufficient to
       reflect to the eye the rays that fall upon them. Now the new moon
       naturally reflects the solar rays more directly towards the eye from
       the crests of the waves than from any other part, as is shown by the
       form of the moon, whose rays a strike the waves _b_ and are
       reflected in the line _b d_, the eye being situated at _d_. This
       cannot happen at the full moon, when the solar rays, being in the
       west, fall on the extreme waters of the moon to the East from _n_ to
       _m_, and are not reflected to the eye in the West, but are thrown
       back eastwards, with but slight deflection from the straight course
       of the solar ray; and thus the angle of incidence is very wide
       indeed.
       The moon is an opaque and solid body and if, on the contrary, it
       were transparent, it would not receive the light of the sun.
       The yellow or yolk of an egg remains in the middle of the albumen,
       without moving on either side; now it is either lighter or heavier
       than this albumen, or equal to it; if it is lighter, it ought to
       rise above all the albumen and stop in contact with the shell of the
       egg; and if it is heavier, it ought to sink, and if it is equal, it
       might just as well be at one of the ends, as in the middle or below
       [54].
       [Footnote 48-64: Compare No. 861.]
       The innumerable images of the solar rays reflected from the
       innumerable waves of the sea, as they fall upon those waves, are
       what cause us to see the very broad and continuous radiance on the
       surface of the sea.
       897.
       That the sun could not be mirrored in the body of the moon, which is
       a convex mirror, in such a way as that so much of its surface as is
       illuminated by the sun, should reflect the sun unless the moon had a
       surface adapted to reflect it--in waves and ridges, like the surface
       of the sea when its surface is moved by the wind.
       [Footnote: In the original diagrams _sole_ is written at the place
       marked _A; luna_ at _C,_ and _terra_ at the two spots marked _B_.]
       The waves in water multiply the image of the object reflected in it.
       These waves reflect light, each by its own line, as the surface of
       the fir cone does [Footnote 14: See the diagram p. 145.]
       These are 2 figures one different from the other; one with
       undulating water and the other with smooth water.
       It is impossible that at any distance the image of the sun cast on
       the surface of a spherical body should occupy the half of the
       sphere.
       Here you must prove that the earth produces all the same effects
       with regard to the moon, as the moon with regard to the earth.
       The moon, with its reflected light, does not shine like the sun,
       because the light of the moon is not a continuous reflection of that
       of the sun on its whole surface, but only on the crests and hollows
       of the waves of its waters; and thus the sun being confusedly
       reflected, from the admixture of the shadows that lie between the
       lustrous waves, its light is not pure and clear as the sun is.
       [Footnote 38: This refers to the small diagram placed between _B_
       and _B_.--]. The earth between the moon on the fifteenth day and the
       sun. [Footnote 39: See the diagram below the one referred to in the
       preceding note.] Here the sun is in the East and the moon on the
       fifteenth day in the West. [Footnote 40.41: Refers to the diagram
       below the others.] The moon on the fifteenth [day] between the earth
       and the sun. [41]Here it is the moon which has the sun to the West
       and the earth to the East.
       898.
       WHAT SORT OF THING THE MOON IS.
       The moon is not of itself luminous, but is highly fitted to
       assimilate the character of light after the manner of a mirror, or
       of water, or of any other reflecting body; and it grows larger in
       the East and in the West, like the sun and the other planets. And
       the reason is that every luminous body looks larger in proportion as
       it is remote. It is easy to understand that every planet and star is
       farther from us when in the West than when it is overhead, by about
       3500 miles, as is proved on the margin [Footnote 7: refers to the
       first diagram.--A = _sole_ (the sun), B = _terra_ (the earth), C =
       _luna_ (the moon).], and if you see the sun or moon mirrored in the
       water near to you, it looks to you of the same size in the water as
       in the sky. But if you recede to the distance of a mile, it will
       look 100 times larger; and if you see the sun reflected in the sea
       at sunset, its image would look to you more than 10 miles long;
       because that reflected image extends over more than 10 miles of sea.
       And if you could stand where the moon is, the sun would look to you,
       as if it were reflected from all the sea that it illuminates by day;
       and the land amid the water would appear just like the dark spots
       that are on the moon, which, when looked at from our earth, appears
       to men the same as our earth would appear to any men who might dwell
       in the moon.
       [Footnote: This text has already been published by LIBRI: _Histoire
       des Sciences,_ III, pp. 224, 225.]
       OF THE NATURE OF THE MOON.
       When the moon is entirely lighted up to our sight, we see its full
       daylight; and at that time, owing to the reflection of the solar
       rays which fall on it and are thrown off towards us, its ocean casts
       off less moisture towards us; and the less light it gives the more
       injurious it is.
       899.
       OF THE MOON.
       I say that as the moon has no light in itself and yet is luminous,
       it is inevitable but that its light is caused by some other body.
       900.
       OF THE MOON.
       All my opponent's arguments to say that there is no water in the
       moon. [Footnote: The objections are very minutely noted down in the
       manuscript, but they hardly seem to have a place here.]
       901.
       Answer to Maestro Andrea da Imola, who said that the solar rays
       reflected from a convex mirror are mingled and lost at a short
       distance; whereby it is altogether denied that the luminous side of
       the moon is of the nature of a mirror, and that consequently the
       light is not produced by the innumerable multitude of the waves of
       that sea, which I declared to be the portion of the moon which is
       illuminated by the solar rays.
       Let _o p_ be the body of the sun, _c n s_ the moon, and _b_ the eye
       which, above the base _c n_ of the cathetus _c n m_, sees the body
       of the sun reflected at equal angles _c n_; and the same again on
       moving the eye from _b_ to _a_. [Footnote: The large diagram on the
       margin of page 161 belongs to this chapter.]
       Explanation of the lumen cinereum in the moon (902)
       902.
       OF THE MOON.
       No solid body is less heavy than the atmosphere.
       [Footnote: 1. On the margin are the words _tola romantina,
       tola--ferro stagnato_ (tinned iron); _romantina_ is some special
       kind of sheet-iron no longer known by that name.]
       Having proved that the part of the moon that shines consists of
       water, which mirrors the body of the sun and reflects the radiance
       it receives from it; and that, if these waters were devoid of waves,
       it would appear small, but of a radiance almost like the sun; --[5]
       It must now be shown whether the moon is a heavy or a light body:
       for, if it were a heavy body--admitting that at every grade of
       distance from the earth greater levity must prevail, so that water
       is lighter than the earth, and air than water, and fire than air and
       so on successively--it would seem that if the moon had density as it
       really has, it would have weight, and having weight, that it could
       not be sustained in the space where it is, and consequently that it
       would fall towards the centre of the universe and become united to
       the earth; or if not the moon itself, at least its waters would fall
       away and be lost from it, and descend towards the centre, leaving
       the moon without any and so devoid of lustre. But as this does not
       happen, as might in reason be expected, it is a manifest sign that
       the moon is surrounded by its own elements: that is to say water,
       air and fire; and thus is, of itself and by itself, suspended in
       that part of space, as our earth with its element is in this part of
       space; and that heavy bodies act in the midst of its elements just
       as other heavy bodies do in ours [Footnote 15: This passage would
       certainly seem to establish Leonardo's claim to be regarded as the
       original discoverer of the cause of the ashy colour of the new moon
       (_lumen cinereum_). His observations however, having hitherto
       remained unknown to astronomers, Moestlin and Kepler have been
       credited with the discoveries which they made independently a
       century later.
       Some disconnected notes treat of the same subject in MS. C. A. 239b;
       718b and 719b; "_Perche la luna cinta della parte alluminata dal
       sole in ponente, tra maggior splendore in mezzo a tal cerchio, che
       quando essa eclissava il sole. Questo accade perche nell' eclissare
       il sole ella ombrava il nostro oceano, il qual caso non accade
       essendo in ponente, quando il sole alluma esso oceano_." The editors
       of the "_Saggio_" who first published this passage (page 12) add
       another short one about the seasons in the moon which I confess not
       to have seen in the original manuscript: "_La luna ha ogni mese un
       verno e una state, e ha maggiori freddi e maggiori caldi, e i suoi
       equinozii son piu freddi de' nostri._"]
       When the eye is in the East and sees the moon in the West near to
       the setting sun, it sees it with its shaded portion surrounded by
       luminous portions; and the lateral and upper portion of this light
       is derived from the sun, and the lower portion from the ocean in the
       West, which receives the solar rays and reflects them on the lower
       waters of the moon, and indeed affords the part of the moon that is
       in shadow as much radiance as the moon gives the earth at midnight.
       Therefore it is not totally dark, and hence some have believed that
       the moon must in parts have a light of its own besides that which is
       given it by the sun; and this light is due, as has been said, to the
       above- mentioned cause,--that our seas are illuminated by the sun.
       Again, it might be said that the circle of radiance shown by the
       moon when it and the sun are both in the West is wholly borrowed
       from the sun, when it, and the sun, and the eye are situated as is
       shown above.
       [Footnote 23. 24: The larger of the two diagrams reproduced above
       stands between these two lines, and the smaller one is sketched in
       the margin. At the spot marked _A_ Leonardo wrote _corpo solare_
       (solar body) in the larger diagram and _Sole_ (sun) in the smaller
       one. At _C luna_ (moon) is written and at _B terra_ (the earth).]
       Some might say that the air surrounding the moon as an element,
       catches the light of the sun as our atmosphere does, and that it is
       this which completes the luminous circle on the body of the moon.
       Some have thought that the moon has a light of its own, but this
       opinion is false, because they have founded it on that dim light
       seen between the hornes of the new moon, which looks dark where it
       is close to the bright part, while against the darkness of the
       background it looks so light that many have taken it to be a ring of
       new radiance completing the circle where the tips of the horns
       illuminated by the sun cease to shine [Footnote 34: See Pl. CVIII,
       No. 5.]. And this difference of background arises from the fact that
       the portion of that background which is conterminous with the bright
       part of the moon, by comparison with that brightness looks darker
       than it is; while at the upper part, where a portion of the luminous
       circle is to be seen of uniform width, the result is that the moon,
       being brighter there than the medium or background on which it is
       seen by comparison with that darkness it looks more luminous at that
       edge than it is. And that brightness at such a time itself is
       derived from our ocean and other inland-seas. These are, at that
       time, illuminated by the sun which is already setting in such a way
       as that the sea then fulfils the same function to the dark side of
       the moon as the moon at its fifteenth day does to us when the sun is
       set. And the small amount of light which the dark side of the moon
       receives bears the same proportion to the light of that side which
       is illuminated, as that... [Footnote 42: Here the text breaks off;
       lines 43-52 are written on the margin.].
       If you want to see how much brighter the shaded portion of the moon
       is than the background on which it is seen, conceal the luminous
       portion of the moon with your hand or with some other more distant
       object.
       On the spots in the moon (903-907)
       903.
       THE SPOTS ON THE MOON.
       Some have said that vapours rise from the moon, after the manner of
       clouds and are interposed between the moon and our eyes. But, if
       this were the case, these spots would never be permanent, either as
       to position or form; and, seeing the moon from various aspects, even
       if these spots did not move they would change in form, as objects do
       which are seen from different sides.
       904.
       OF THE SPOTS ON THE MOON.
       Others say that the moon is composed of more or less transparent
       parts; as though one part were something like alabaster and others
       like crystal or glass. It would follow from this that the sun
       casting its rays on the less transparent portions, the light would
       remain on the surface, and so the denser part would be illuminated,
       and the transparent portions would display the shadow of their
       darker depths; and this is their account of the structure and nature
       of the moon. And this opinion has found favour with many
       philosophers, and particularly with Aristotle, and yet it is a false
       view--for, in the various phases and frequent changes of the moon
       and sun to our eyes, we should see these spots vary, at one time
       looking dark and at another light: they would be dark when the sun
       is in the West and the moon in the middle of the sky; for then the
       transparent hollows would be in shadow as far as the tops of the
       edges of those transparent hollows, because the sun could not then
       fling his rays into the mouth of the hollows, which however, at full
       moon, would be seen in bright light, at which time the moon is in
       the East and faces the sun in the West; then the sun would
       illuminate even the lowest depths of these transparent places and
       thus, as there would be no shadows cast, the moon at these times
       would not show us the spots in question; and so it would be, now
       more and now less, according to the changes in the position of the
       sun to the moon, and of the moon to our eyes, as I have said above.
       905.
       OF THE SPOTS ON THE MOON.
       It has been asserted, that the spots on the moon result from the
       moon being of varying thinness or density; but if this were so, when
       there is an eclipse of the moon the solar rays would pierce through
       the portions which were thin as is alleged [Footnote 3-5: _Eclissi_.
       This word, as it seems to me, here means eclipses of the sun; and
       the sense of the passage, as I understand it, is that by the
       foregoing hypothesis the moon, when it comes between the sun and the
       earth must appear as if pierced,--we may say like a sieve.]. But as
       we do not see this effect the opinion must be false.
       Others say that the surface of the moon is smooth and polished and
       that, like a mirror, it reflects in itself the image of our earth.
       This view is also false, inasmuch as the land, where it is not
       covered with water, presents various aspects and forms. Hence when
       the moon is in the East it would reflect different spots from those
       it would show when it is above us or in the West; now the spots on
       the moon, as they are seen at full moon, never vary in the course of
       its motion over our hemisphere. A second reason is that an object
       reflected in a convex body takes up but a small portion of that
       body, as is proved in perspective [Footnote 18: _come e provato_.
       This alludes to the accompanying diagram.]. The third reason is that
       when the moon is full, it only faces half the hemisphere of the
       illuminated earth, on which only the ocean and other waters reflect
       bright light, while the land makes spots on that brightness; thus
       half of our earth would be seen girt round with the brightness of
       the sea lighted up by the sun, and in the moon this reflection would
       be the smallest part of that moon. Fourthly, a radiant body cannot
       be reflected from another equally radiant; therefore the sea, since
       it borrows its brightness from the sun,--as the moon does--, could
       not cause the earth to be reflected in it, nor indeed could the body
       of the sun be seen reflected in it, nor indeed any star opposite to
       it.
       906.
       If you keep the details of the spots of the moon under observation
       you will often find great variation in them, and this I myself have
       proved by drawing them. And this is caused by the clouds that rise
       from the waters in the moon, which come between the sun and those
       waters, and by their shadow deprive these waters of the sun's rays.
       Thus those waters remain dark, not being able to reflect the solar body.
       907.
       How the spots on the moon must have varied from what they formerly
       were, by reason of the course of its waters.
       On the moon's halo.
       908.
       OF HALOS ROUND THE MOON.
       I have found, that the circles which at night seem to surround the
       moon, of various sizes, and degrees of density are caused by various
       gradations in the densities of the vapours which exist at different
       altitudes between the moon and our eyes. And of these halos the
       largest and least red is caused by the lowest of these vapours; the
       second, smaller one, is higher up, and looks redder because it is
       seen through two vapours. And so on, as they are higher they will
       appear smaller and redder, because, between the eye and them, there
       is thicker vapour. Whence it is proved that where they are seen to
       be reddest, the vapours are most dense.
       On instruments for observing the moon (909-910)
       909.
       If you want to prove why the moon appears larger than it is, when it
       reaches the horizon; take a lens which is highly convex on one
       surface and concave on the opposite, and place the concave side next
       the eye, and look at the object beyond the convex surface; by this
       means you will have produced an exact imitation of the atmosphere
       included beneath the sphere of fire and outside that of water; for
       this atmosphere is concave on the side next the earth, and convex
       towards the fire.
       910.
       Construct glasses to see the moon magnified.
       [Footnote: See the Introduction, p. 136, Fracastoro says in his work
       Homocentres: "_Per dua specilla ocularla si quis perspiciat, alteri
       altero superposito, majora multo et propinquiora videbit
       omnia.--Quin imo quaedam specilla ocularia fiunt tantae densitatis,
       ut si per ea quis aut lunam, aut aliud siderum spectet, adeo
       propinqua illa iudicet, ut ne turres ipsas excedant_" (sect. II c. 8
       and sect. III, c. 23).]
       I. THE STARS.
       On the light of the stars (911-913)
       911.
       The stars are visible by night and not by day, because we are
       eneath the dense atmosphere, which is full of innumerable
       articles of moisture, each of which independently, when the
       ays of the sun fall upon it, reflects a radiance, and so these
       umberless bright particles conceal the stars; and if it were not
       or this atmosphere the sky would always display the stars against
       ts darkness.
       [Footnote: See No. 296, which also refers to starlight.]
       912.
       Whether the stars have their light from the sun or in themselves.
       Some say that they shine of themselves, alledging that if Venus
       nd Mercury had not a light of their own, when they come between
       ur eye and the sun they would darken so much of the sun as they
       ould cover from our eye. But this is false, for it is proved that
       dark object against a luminous body is enveloped and entirely
       oncealed by the lateral rays of the rest of that luminous body
       nd so remains invisible. As may be seen when the sun is seen
       hrough the boughs of trees bare of their leaves, at some distance
       he branches do not conceal any portion of the sun from our eye.
       he same thing happens with the above mentioned planets which,
       hough they have no light of their own, do not--as has been said--
       onceal any part of the sun from our eye
       [18].
       SECOND ARGUMENT.
       Some say that the stars appear most brilliant at night in proportion
       as they are higher up; and that if they had no light of their own,
       the shadow of the earth which comes between them and the sun, would
       darken them, since they would not face nor be faced by the solar
       body. But those persons have not considered that the conical shadow
       of the earth cannot reach many of the stars; and even as to those it
       does reach, the cone is so much diminished that it covers very
       little of the star's mass, and all the rest is illuminated by the
       sun.
       Footnote: From this and other remarks (see No. 902) it is clear
       hat Leonardo was familiar with the phenomena of Irradiation.]
       13.
       Why the planets appear larger in the East than they do overhead,
       whereas the contrary should be the case, as they are 3500 miles
       nearer to us when in mid sky than when on the horizon.
       All the degrees of the elements, through which the images of the
       celestial bodies pass to reach the eye, are equal curves and the
       angles by which the central line of those images passes through
       them, are unequal angles [Footnote 13: _inequali_, here and
       elsewhere does not mean unequal in the sense of not being equal to
       each other, but angles which are not right angles.]; and the
       distance is greater, as is shown by the excess of _a b_ beyond _a
       d_; and the enlargement of these celestial bodies on the horizon is
       shown by the 9th of the 7th.
       Observations on the stars (914)
       914.
       To see the real nature of the planets open the covering and note at
       the base [Footnote 4: _basa_. This probably alludes to some
       instrument, perhaps the Camera obscura.] one single planet, and the
       reflected movement of this base will show the nature of the said
       planet; but arrange that the base may face only one at the time.
       On history of astronomy (915)
       915.
       Cicero says in [his book] De Divinatione that Astrology has been
       practised five hundred seventy thousand years before the Trojan war.
       57000.
       [Footnote: The statement that CICERO, _De Divin._ ascribes the
       discovery of astrology to a period 57000 years before the Trojan war
       I believe to be quite erroneous. According to ERNESTI, _Clavis
       Ciceroniana,_ CH. G. SCHULZ (_Lexic. Cicer._) and the edition of _De
       Divin._ by GIESE the word Astrologia occurs only twice in CICERO:
       _De Divin. II_, 42. _Ad Chaldaeorum monstra veniamus, de quibus
       Eudoxus, Platonis auditor, in astrologia judicio doctissimorum
       hominum facile princeps, sic opinatur (id quod scriptum reliquit):
       Chaldaeis in praedictione et in notatione cujusque vitae ex natali
       die minime esse credendum._" He then quotes the condemnatory verdict
       of other philosophers as to the teaching of the Chaldaeans but says
       nothing as to the antiquity and origin of astronomy. CICERO further
       notes _De oratore_ I, 16 that Aratus was "_ignarus astrologiae_" but
       that is all. So far as I know the word occurs nowhere else in
       CICERO; and the word _Astronomia_ he does not seem to have used at
       all. (H. MULLER-STRUBING.)]
       Of time and its divisions (916-918)
       916.
       Although time is included in the class of Continuous Quantities,
       being indivisible and immaterial, it does not come entirely under
       the head of Geometry, which represents its divisions by means of
       figures and bodies of infinite variety, such as are seen to be
       continuous in their visible and material properties. But only with
       its first principles does it agree, that is with the Point and the
       Line; the point may be compared to an instant of time, and the line
       may be likened to the length of a certain quantity of time, and just
       as a line begins and terminates in a point, so such a space of time.
       begins and terminates in an instant. And whereas a line is
       infinitely divisible, the divisibility of a space of time is of the
       same nature; and as the divisions of the line may bear a certain
       proportion to each other, so may the divisions of time.
       [Footnote: This passage is repeated word for word on page 190b of
       the same manuscript and this is accounted for by the text in Vol. I,
       No. 4. Compare also No. 1216.]
       917.
       Describe the nature of Time as distinguished from the Geometrical
       definitions.
       918.
       Divide an hour into 3000 parts, and this you can do with a clock by
       making the pendulum lighter or heavier. _