It is always the under side of the branches of any plant that show themselves to the wind which strikes it, and one leans against the other.


The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci (MacCurdy, 1938) - XVII Flight


It is always the under side of the branches of any plant that show themselves to the wind which strikes it, and one leans against the other.

It is always the under side of the branches of any plant that show themselves to the wind which strikes it, and one leans against the other.

It is always the under side of the branches of any plant that show themselves to the wind which strikes it, and one leans against the other.

It is always the under side of the branches of any plant that show themselves to the wind which strikes it, and one leans against the other.