In all by which praise is won, Leon Battista was from his childhood the first.Of his various gymnastic feats and exercises we read with astonishment how, with his feet together, he could spring over a man's head; how in the cathedral, he threw a coin in the air till it was heard to ring against the distant roof; how the wildest horses trembled under him.In three things he desired to appear faultless to others, in walking, in riding, and in speaking.He learned music without a master, and yet his compositions were admired by professional judges.Under the pressure of poverty, he studied both civil and canonical law for many years, till exhaustion brought on a severe illness.In his twenty-fourth year, finding his memory for words weakened, but his sense of facts unimpaired, he set to work at physics and mathematics.And all the while he acquired every sort of accomplishment and dexterity, cross-examining artists, scholars and artisans of all descriptions, down to the cobblers, about the secrets and peculiarities of their craft.Painting and modelling he practiced by the way, and especially excelled in admirable likenesses from memory.Great admiration was excited by his mysterious 'camera obscura,' in which he showed at one time the stars and the moon rising over rocky hills, at another wide landscapes with mountains and gulfs receding into dim perspective, and with fleets advancing on the waters in shade or sunshine.And that which others created he welcomed joyfully, and held every human achievement which followed the laws of beauty for something almost divine.To all this must be added his literary works, first of all those on art, which are landmarks and authorities of the first order for the Renaissance of Form, especially in architecture; then his Latin prose writings -- novels and other works -- of which some have been taken for productions of antiquity; his elegies, eclogues, and humorous dinner-speeches.He also wrote an Italian treatise on domestic life in four books; and even a funeral oration on his dog.His serious and witty sayings were thought worth collecting, and specimens of them, many columns long, are quoted in his biography.And all that he had and knew he imparted, as rich natures always do, without the least reserve, giving away his chief discoveries for nothing.But the deepest spring of his nature has yet to be spoken of -- the sympathetic intensity with which he entered into the whole life around him.At the sight of noble trees and waving cornfields he shed tears; handsome and dignified old men he honored as 'a delight of nature,' and could never look at them enough.Perfectly formed animals won his goodwill as being specially favored by nature; and more than once, when he was ill, the sight of a beautiful landscape cured him.No wonder that those who saw him in this close and mysterious communion with the world ascribed to him the gift of prophecy.He was said to have foretold a bloody catastrophe in the family of Este, the fate of Florence and that of the Popes many years beforehand, and to be able to read in the countenances and the hearts of men.It need not be added that an iron will pervaded and sustained his whole personality; like all the great men of the Renaissance, he said, 'Men can do all things if they will.'
第43章 THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE INDIVIDUAL(3)(1 / 3)