On the sunny slopes of Monte Albano,
between Florence and Pisa, the little town of Vinci
lay high among the rocks that crowned the steep hillside.
It was but a little town. Only a few houses crowded
together round an old castle in the midst, and it
looked from a distance like a swallow’s nest
clinging to the bare steep rocks.
Here in the year 1452 Leonardo, son
of Ser Piero da Vinci, was born.
It was in the age when people told fortunes by the
stars, and when a baby was born they would eagerly
look up and decide whether it was a lucky or unlucky
star which shone upon the child. Surely if it
had been possible in this way to tell what fortune
awaited the little Leonardo, a strange new star must
have shone that night, brighter than the others and
unlike the rest in the dazzling light of its strength
and beauty.
Leonardo was always a strange child.
Even his beauty was not like that of other children.
He had the most wonderful waving hair, falling in
regular ripples, like the waters of a fountain, the
colour of bright gold, and soft as spun silk.
His eyes were blue and clear, with a mysterious light
in them, not the warm light of a sunny sky, but rather
the blue that glints in the iceberg. They were
merry eyes too, when he laughed, but underneath was
always that strange cold look. There was a charm
about his smile which no one could resist, and he was
a favourite with all. Yet people shook their
heads sometimes as they looked at him, and they talked
in whispers of the old witch who had lent her goat
to nourish the little Leonardo when he was a baby.
The woman was a dealer in black magic, and who knew
but that the child might be a changeling?
It was the old grandmother, Mona Lena,
who brought Leonardo up and spoilt him not a little.
His father, Ser Piero, was a lawyer, and spent most
of his time in Florence, but when he returned to the
old castle of Vinci, he began to give Leonardo lessons
and tried to find out what the boy was fit for.
But Leonardo hated those lessons and would not learn,
so when he was seven years old he was sent to school.
This did not answer any better.
The rough play of the boys was not to his liking.
When he saw them drag the wings off butterflies, or
torture any animal that fell into their hands, his
face grew white with pain, and he would take no share
in their games. The Latin grammar, too, was a
terrible task, while the many things he longed to know
no one taught him.
So it happened that many a time, instead
of going to school, he would slip away and escape
up into the hills, as happy as a little wild goat.
Here was all the sweet fresh air of heaven, instead
of the stuffy schoolroom. Here were no cruel,
clumsy boys, but all the wild creatures that he loved.
Here he could learn the real things his heart was hungry
to know, not merely words which meant nothing and led
to nowhere.
For hours he would lie perfectly still
with his heels in the air and his chin resting in
his hands, as he watched a spider weaving its web,
breathless with interest to see how the delicate threads
were turned in and out. The gaily painted butterflies,
the fat buzzing bees, the little sharp-tongued green
lizards, he loved to watch them all, but above everything
he loved the birds. Oh, if only he too had wings
to dart like the swallows, and swoop and sail and
dart again! What was the secret power in their
wings? Surely by watching he might learn it.
Sometimes it seemed as if his heart would burst with
the longing to learn that secret. It was always
the hidden reason of things that he desired to know.
Much as he loved the flowers he must pull their petals
of, one by one, to see how each was joined, to wonder
at the dusty pollen, and touch the honey-covered stamens.
Then when the sun began to sink he would turn sadly
homewards, very hungry, with torn clothes and tired
feet, but with a store of sunshine in his heart.
His grandmother shook her head when
Leonardo appeared after one of his days of wandering.
‘I know thou shouldst be whipped
for playing truant,’ she said; ’and I
should also punish thee for tearing thy clothes.’
‘Ah! but thou wilt not whip
me,’ answered Leonardo, smiling at her with
his curious quiet smile, for he had full confidence
in her love.
‘Well, I love to see thee happy,
and I will not punish thee this time,’ said
his grandmother; ’but if these tales reach thy
father’s ears, he will not be so tender as I
am towards thee.’
And, sure enough, the very next time
that a complaint was made from the school, his father
happened to be at home, and then the storm burst.
‘Next time I will flog thee,’
said Ser Piero sternly, with rising anger at the careless
air of the boy. ’Meanwhile we will see what
a little imprisonment will do towards making thee
a better child.’
Then he took the boy by the shoulders
and led him to a little dark cupboard under the stairs,
and there shut him up for three whole days.
There was no kicking or beating at
the locked door. Leonardo sat quietly there in
the dark, thinking his own thoughts, and wondering
why there seemed so little justice in the world.
But soon even that wonder passed away, and as usual
when he was alone he began to dream dreams of the
time when he should have learned the swallows’
secrets and should have wings like theirs.
But if there were complaints about
Leonardo’s dislike of the boys and the Latin
grammar, there would be none about the lessons he chose
to learn. Indeed, some of the masters began to
dread the boy’s eager questions, which were
sometimes more than they could answer. Scarcely
had he begun the study of arithmetic than he made such
rapid progress, and wanted to puzzle out so many problems,
that the masters were amazed. His mind seemed
always eagerly asking for more light, and was never
satisfied.
But it was out on the hillside that
he spent his happiest hours. He loved every crawling,
creeping, or flying thing, however ugly. Curious
beasts which might have frightened another child were
to him charming and interesting. There as he
listened to the carolling of the birds and bent his
head to catch the murmured song of the mountain-streams,
the love of music began to steal into his heart.
He did not rest then until he managed
to get a lute and learned how to play upon it.
And when he had mastered the notes and learned the
rules of music, he began to play airs which no one
had ever heard before, and to sing such strange sweet
songs that the golden notes flowed out as fresh and
clear as the song of a lark in the early morning of
spring.
‘The child is a changeling,’
said some, as they saw Leonardo tenderly lift a crushed
lizard in his hand, or watched him play with a spotted
snake or great hairy spider.
‘A changeling perhaps,’
said others, ’but one that hath the voice of
an angel.’ For every one stopped to listen
when the boy’s voice was heard singing through
the streets of the little town.
He was a puzzle to every one, and
yet a delight to all, even when they understood him
least.
So time went on, and when Leonardo
was thirteen his father took him away to Florence
that he might begin to be trained for some special
work. But what work? Ah! that was the rub.
The boy could do so many things well that it was difficult
to fix on one.
At that time there was living in Florence
an old man who knew a great deal about the stars,
and who made wonderful calculations about them.
He was a famous astronomer, but he cared not at all
for honour or fame, but lived a simple quiet life
by himself and would not mix with the gay world.
Few visitors ever came to see him,
for it was known that he would receive no one, and
so it was a great surprise to old Toscanelli when
one night a gentle knock sounded at his door, and a
boy walked quietly in and stood before him.
Hastily the old man looked up, and
his first thought was to ask the child how he dared
enter without leave, and then ask him to be gone,
but as he looked at the fair face he felt the charm
of the curious smile, and the light in the blue eyes,
and instead he laid his hand upon the boy’s
golden head and said: ‘What dost thou seek,
my son?’
‘I would learn all that thou
canst teach me,’ said Leonardo, for it was he.
The old man smiled.
‘Behold the boundless self-confidence of youth!’
he said.
But as they talked together, and the
boy asked his many eager questions, a great wonder
awoke in the astronomer’s mind, and his eyes
shone with interest. This child-mind held depths
of understanding such as he had never met with among
his learned friends. Day after day the old man
and the boy bent eagerly together over their problems,
and when night fell Toscanelli would take the child
up with him to his lonely tower above Florence, and
teach him to know the stars and to understand many
things.
‘This is all very well,’
said Ser Piero, ’but the boy must do more than
mere star-gazing. He must earn a living for himself,
and methinks we might make a painter of him.’
That very day, therefore, he gathered
together some of Leonardo’s drawings which lay
carelessly scattered about, and took them to the studio
of Verocchio the painter, who lived close by the Ponte
Vecchio.
‘Dost thou think thou canst
make aught of the boy?’ he asked, spreading
out the drawings before Verocchio.
The painter’s quick eyes examined
the work with deep interest.
‘Send him to me at once,’
he said. ‘This is indeed marvellous talent.’
So Leonardo entered the studio as
a pupil, and learned all that could be taught him
with the same quickness with which he learned anything
that he cared to know.
Every one who saw his work declared
that he would be the wonder of the age, but Verocchio
shook his head.
‘He is too wonderful,’
he said. ’He aims at too great perfection.
He wants to know everything and do everything, and
life is too short for that. He finishes nothing,
because he is ever starting to do something else.’
Verocchio’s words were true;
the boy seldom worked long at one thing. His
hands were never idle, and often, instead of painting,
he would carve out tiny windmills and curious toys
which worked with pulleys and ropes, or made exquisite
little clay models of horses and all the other animals
that he loved. But he never forgot the longing
that had filled his heart when he was a child the
desire to learn the secret of flying.
For days he would sit idle and think
of nothing but soaring wings, then he would rouse
himself and begin to make some strange machine which
he thought might hold the secret that he sought.
‘A waste of time,’ growled
Verocchio. ’See here, thou wouldst be better
employed if thou shouldst set to work and help me finish
this picture of the Baptism for the good monks of
Vallambrosa. Let me see how thou canst paint
in the kneeling figure of the angel at the side.’
For a while the boy stood motionless
before the picture as if he was looking at something
far away. Then he seized the brushes with his
left hand and began to paint with quick certain sweep.
He never stopped to think, but worked as if the angel
were already there, and he were but brushing away
the veil that hid it from the light.
Then, when it was done, the master
came and looked silently on. For a moment a quick
stab of jealousy ran through his heart. Year after
year had he worked and striven to reach his ideal.
Long days of toil and weary nights had he spent, winning
each step upwards by sheer hard work. And here
was this boy without an effort able to rise far above
him. All the knowledge which the master had groped
after, had been grasped at once by the wonderful mind
of the pupil. But the envious feeling passed
quickly away, and Verocchio laid his hand upon Leonardo’s
shoulder.
‘I have found my master,’
he said quietly, ‘and I will paint no more.’
Leonardo scarcely seemed to hear;
he was thinking of something else now, and he seldom
noticed if people praised or blamed him. His
thoughts had fixed themselves upon something he had
seen that morning which had troubled him. On
the way to the studio he had passed a tiny shop in
a narrow street where a seller of birds was busy hanging
his cages up on the nails fastened to the outside
wall.
The thought of those poor little prisoners
beating their wings against the cruel bars and breaking
their hearts with longing for their wild free life,
had haunted him all day, and now he could bear it no
longer. He seized his cap and hurried off, all
forgetful of his kneeling angel and the master’s
praise.
He reached the little shop and called to the man within.
‘How much wilt thou take for
thy birds?’ he cried, and pointed to the little
wooden cages that hung against the wall.
‘Plague on them,’ answered
the man, ’they will often die before I can make
a sale by them. Thou canst have them all for one
silver piece.’
In a moment Leonardo had paid the
money and had turned towards the row of little cages.
One by one he opened the doors and set the prisoners
free, and those that were too frightened or timid to
fly away, he gently drew out with his hand, and sent
them gaily whirling up above his head into the blue
sky.
The man looked with blank astonishment
at the empty cages, and wondered if the handsome young
man was mad. But Leonardo paid no heed to him,
but stood gazing up until every one of the birds had
disappeared.
‘Happy things,’ he said,
with a sigh. ’Will you ever teach me the
secret of your wings, I wonder?’
It was with great pleasure that Ser
Piero heard of his son’s success at Verocchio’s
studio, and he began to have hopes that the boy would
make a name for himself after all. It happened
just then that he was on a visit to his castle at
Vinci, and one morning a peasant who lived on the
estate came to ask a great favour of him.
He had bought a rough wooden shield
which he was very anxious should have a design painted
on it in Florence, and he begged Ser Piero to see
that it was done. The peasant was a faithful servant,
and very useful in supplying the castle with fish
and game, so Ser Piero was pleased to grant him his
request.
’Leonardo shall try his hand
upon it. It is time he became useful to me,’
said Ser Piero to himself. So on his return to
Florence he took the shield to his son.
It was a rough, badly-shaped shield,
so Leonardo held it to the fire and began to straighten
it. For though his hands looked delicate and
beautifully formed, they were as strong as steel, and
he could bend bars of iron without an effort.
Then he sent the shield to a turner to be smoothed
and rounded, and when it was ready he sat down to think
what he should paint upon it, for he loved to draw
strange monsters.
‘I will make it as terrifying
as the head of Medusa,’ he said at last, highly
delighted with the plan that had come into his head.
Then he went out and collected together
all the strangest animals he could find lizards,
hedgehogs, newts, snakes, dragon-flies, locusts, bats,
and glow-worms. These he took into his own room,
which no one was allowed to enter, and began to paint
from them a curious monster, partly a lizard and partly
a bat, with something of each of the other animals
added to it.
When it was ready Leonardo hung the
shield in a good light against a dark curtain, so
that the painted monster stood out in brilliant contrast,
and looked as if its twisted curling limbs were full
of life.
A knock sounded at the door, and Ser
Piero’s voice was heard outside asking if the
shield was finished.
‘Come in,’ cried Leonardo, and Ser Piero
entered.
He cast one look at the monster hanging
there and then uttered a cry and turned to flee, but
Leonardo caught hold of his cloak and laughingly told
him to look closer.
‘If I have really succeeded
in frightening thee,’ he said, ’I have
indeed done all I could desire.’
His father could scarcely believe
that it was nothing but a painting, and he was so
proud of the work that he would not part with it, but
gave the peasant of Vinci another shield instead.
Leonardo then began a drawing for
a curtain which was to be woven in silk and gold and
given as a present from the Florentines to the King
of Portugal, and he also began a large picture of the
Adoration of the Shepherds which was never finished.
The young painter grew restless after
a while, and felt the life of the studio narrow and
cramped. He longed to leave Florence and find
work in some new place.
He was not a favourite at the court
of Lorenzo the Magnificent as Filippino Lippi and
Botticelli were. Lorenzo liked those who would
flatter him and do as they were bid, while Leonardo
took his own way in everything and never said what
he did not mean.
But it happened that just then Lorenzo
wished to send a present to Ludovico Sforza, the Duke
of Milan, and the gift he chose was a marvellous musical
instrument which Leonardo had just finished.
It was a silver lute, made in the
form of a horse’s head, the most curious and
beautiful thing ever seen. Lorenzo was charmed
with it.
‘Thou shalt take it thyself,
as my messenger,’ he said to Leonardo. ’I
doubt if another can be found who can play upon it
as thou dost.’
So Leonardo set out for Milan, and
was glad to shake himself free from the narrow life
of the Florentine studio.
Before starting, however, he had written
a letter to the Duke setting down in simple order
all the things he could do, and telling of what use
he could be in times of war and in days of peace.
There seemed nothing that he could
not do. He could make bridges, blow up castles,
dig canals, invent a new kind of cannon, build warships,
and make underground passages. In days of peace
he could design and build houses, make beautiful statues
and paint pictures ’as well as any man, be he
who he may.’
The letter was written in curious
writing from right to left like Hebrew or Arabic.
This was how Leonardo always wrote, using his left
hand, so that it could only be read by holding the
writing up to a mirror.
The Duke was half amazed and half
amused when the letter reached him.
‘Either these are the words
of a fool, or of a man of genius,’ said the
Duke. And when he had once seen and spoken to
Leonardo he saw at once which of the two he deserved
to be called.
Every one at the court was charmed
with the artist’s beautiful face and graceful
manners. His music alone, as he swept the strings
of the silver lute and sang to it his own songs, would
have brought him fame, but the Duke quickly saw that
this was no mere minstrel.
It was soon arranged therefore that
Leonardo should take up his abode at the court of
Milan and receive a yearly pension from the Duke.
Sometimes the pension was paid, and
sometimes it was forgotten, but Leonardo never troubled
about money matters. Somehow or other he must
have all that he wanted, and everything must be fair
and dainty. His clothes were always rich and
costly, but never bright-coloured or gaudy. There
was no plume or jewelled brooch in his black velvet
beretto or cap, and the only touch of colour was his
golden hair, and the mantle of dark red cloth which
he wore in the fashion of the Florentines, thrown
across his shoulder. Above all, he must always
have horses in his stables, for he loved them more
than human beings.
Many were the plans and projects which
the Duke entrusted to Leonardo’s care, but of
all that he did, two great works stand out as greater
than all the rest. One was the painting of the
Last Supper on the walls of the refectory of Santa
Maria delle Grazie, and the other the making of
a model of a great equestrian statue, a bronze horse
with the figure of the Duke upon its back.
’Year after year Leonardo worked
at that wonderful fresco of the Last Supper.
Sometimes for weeks or months he never touched it,
but he always returned to it again. Then for
days he would work from morning till night, scarcely
taking time to eat, and able to think of nothing else,
until suddenly he would put down his brushes and stand
silently for a long, long time before the picture.
It seemed as if he was wasting the precious hours
doing nothing, but in truth he worked more diligently
with his brain when his hands were idle.
Often too when he worked at the model
for the great bronze horse, he would suddenly stop,
and walk quickly through the streets until he came
to the refectory, and there, catching up his brushes,
he would paint in one or perhaps two strokes, and
then return to his modelling.
Besides all this Leonardo was busy
with other plans for the Duke’s amusement, and
no court fête was counted successful without his help.
Nothing seemed too difficult for him to contrive, and
what he did was always new and strange and wonderful.
Once when the King of France came
as a guest to Milan, Leonardo prepared a curious model
of a lion, which by some inside machinery was able
to walk forward several steps to meet the King, and
then open wide its huge jaws and display inside a
bed of sweet-scented lilies, the emblem of France,
to do honour to her King. But while working at
other things Leonardo never forgot his longing to
learn the secret art of flying. Every now and
then a new idea would come into his head, and he would
lay aside all other work until he had made the new
machine which might perhaps act as the wings of a
bird. Each fresh disappointment only made him
more keen to try again.
‘I know we shall some day have
wings,’ he said to his pupils, who sometimes
wondered at the strange work of the master’s
hands. ’It is only a question of knowing
how to make them. I remember once when I was
a baby lying in my cradle, I fancied a bird flew to
me, opened my lips and rubbed its feathers over them.
So it seems to be my fate all my life to talk of wings.’
Very slowly the great fresco of the
Last Supper grew under the master’s hand until
it was nearly finished. The statue, too, was almost
completed, and then evil days fell upon Milan.
The Duke was obliged to flee before the French soldiers,
who forced their way into the town and took possession
of it. Before any one could prevent it, the soldiers
began to shoot their arrows at the great statue, which
they used as a target, and in a few hours the work
of sixteen years was utterly destroyed. It is
sadder still to tell the fate of Leonardo’s fresco,
the greatest picture perhaps that ever was painted.
Dampness lurked in the wall and began to dim and blur
the colours. The careless monks cut a door through
the very centre of the picture, and, later on, when
Napoleon’s soldiers entered Milan, they used
the refectory as a stable, and amused themselves by
throwing stones at what remained of it. But though
little of it is left now to be seen, there is still
enough to make us stand in awe and reverence before
the genius of the great master.
Not far from Milan there lived a friend
of Leonardo’s, whom the master loved to visit.
This Girolamo Melzi had a son called Francesco, a
little motherless boy, who adored the great painter
with all his heart.
Together Leonardo and the child used
to wander out to search for curious animals and rare
flowers, and as they watched the spiders weave their
webs and pulled the flowers to pieces to find out their
secrets, the boy listened with wide wondering eyes
to all the tales which the painter told him.
And at night Leonardo wrapped the little one close
inside his warm cloak and carried him out to see the
stars those same stars which old Toscanelli
had taught him to love long ago in Florence.
Then when the day of parting came the child clung round
the master’s neck and would not let him go.
‘Take me with thee,’ he
cried, ‘do not leave me behind all alone.’
‘I cannot take thee now, little
one,’ said Leonardo gently. ’Thou
art still too small, but later on thou shalt come
to me and be my pupil. This I promise thee.’
It was but a weary wandering life
that awaited Leonardo after he was forced to leave
his home in Milan. It seemed as if it was his
fate to begin many things but to finish nothing.
For a while he lived in Rome, but he did little real
work there.
For several years he lived in Florence
and began to paint a huge battle-picture. There
too he painted the famous portrait of Mona Lisa, which
is now in Paris. Of all portraits that have ever
been painted this is counted the most wonderful and
perfect piece of work, although Leonardo himself called
it unfinished.
By this time the master had fallen
on evil days. All his pupils were gone, and his
friends seemed to have forgotten him. He was sitting
before the fire one stormy night, lonely and sad, when
the door opened and a tall handsome lad came in.
‘Master!’ he cried, and
kneeling down he kissed the old man’s hands.
’Dost thou not know me? I am thy little
Francesco, come to claim thy promise that I should
one day be thy servant and pupil.
Leonardo laid his hand upon the boy’s
fair head and looked into his face.
‘I am growing old,’ he
said, ’and I can no longer do for thee what I
might once have done. I am but a poor wanderer
now. Dost thou indeed wish to cast in thy lot
with mine?’
‘I care only to be near thee,’
said the boy. ’I will go with thee to the
ends of the earth.’
So when, soon after, Leonardo received
an invitation from the new King of France, he took
the boy with him, and together they made their home
in the little chateau of Claux near the town of Amboise.
The master’s hair was silvered
now, and his long beard was as white as snow.
His keen blue eyes looked weary and tired of life,
and care had drawn many deep lines on his beautiful
face. Sad thoughts were always his company.
The one word ‘failure’ seemed to be written
across his life. What had he done? He had
begun many things and had finished but few. His
great fresco was even now fading away and becoming
dim and blurred. His model for the marvellous
horse was destroyed. A few pictures remained,
but these had never quite reached his ideal. The
crowd who had once hailed him as the greatest of all
artists, could now only talk of Michelangelo and the
young Raphael. Michelangelo himself had once
scornfully told him he was a failure and could finish
nothing.
He was glad to leave Italy and all
its memories behind, and he hoped to begin work again
in his quiet little French home. But Death was
drawing near, and before many years had passed he
grew too weak to hold a brush or pencil.
It was in the springtime of the year
that the end came. Francesco had opened the window
and gently lifted the master in his strong young arms,
that he might look once more on the outside world which
he loved so dearly. The trees were putting on
their dainty dress of tender green, white clouds swept
across the blue sky, and April sunshine flooded the
room.
As he looked out, the master’s tired eyes woke
into life.
‘Look!’ he cried, ’the
swallows have come back! Oh that they would lend
me their wings that I might fly away and be at rest!’
The swallows darted and circled about
in the clear spring air, busy with their building
plans, but Francesco thought he heard the rustle of
other wings, as the master’s soul, freed from
the tired body, was at last borne upwards higher than
any earthly wings could soar.