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Saturday, February 2, 2019

The Cave story





Leonardo and the Whale excerpt shows the effect the Whale Fossil had on Leonardo at the end of the chapter.


Whale Fossils found near Tuscany

I used this as a speech material for Toastmasters.

In Florence, Leonardo Da Vinci chanced upon a dark cave and pondered

Should I enter?

Having wandered some distance across gloomy rocks, he came to the mouth of a great cavern.

He stood astonished in front of it for some time.

Bending back and forth, he tried to see if he could discover anything inside, but the darkness within prevented that.

Suddenly he felt two contrary emotions

Fear – of the threatening dark cave

desire – to see whether there were any marvelous thing within

Desire won.

His unstoppable curiosity triumphed and Leonardo went into the cave.

Embedded in the wall is a fossil whale.

“Oh mighty and once-living instrument of nature

Your vast strength was to no avail

you must abandon your tranquil life to obey the law which God and time gave to creative nature.

 Of no avail are your branching, sturdy dorsal fins with which you pursue your prey,

 plowing your way, tempestuously tearing open the briny waves with your breast.

Walter Isaac says that this whale fossil triggered a dark vision of what would be throughout his life, one of his deepest forebodings, that of an apocalyptic deluge.

Talking of the power held by the long dead-whale

Oh, how many a time the terrified shoals of dolphins and big tuna fish were seen to flee before your insensate fury,

“ You lashed with swift, branching fins and forked tail,

Creating in the sea sudden tempests that buffeted and submerged ships”

“Oh time, swift despoiler of all things

How many kings

How many nations hast thou undone

And how many changes of states and of circumstances have happened since this wondrous fish perished”

 in this winding and cavernous recess? Now unmade by time you lie patiently in this closed place with bones stripped and bare, serving as an armature for the mountain placed over you

At this point Leonardo’s fears were about a realm far different from whatever dangers might be lurking inside the cave. Instead they were driven by an existential dread in the face of the destructive powers of nature. He began scribbling rapidly, using a silverpoint on a red tinted page, describing an apocalypse that begins with water and ends with fire.

“the rivers will be deprived of their waters,

the earth will no longer put forth her greenery

the fields will no more be decked with waving corn

all the animals, finding no fresh grass for pasture, will die”

In this way the fertile and fruitful earth will be forced to end

With the element of fire

And then its surface will be left burnt up to cinder

And this will be the end of all earthly nature”

 

The dark cave that Leonardo’s curiosity compelled him to enter offered up both scientific discoveries and imaginative fantasies, strands that would be interwoven throughout his life.

 

 

 





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