“Excellency, the figure of Judas must be of incomparable evil. Every day I search for this face in the criminal quarter, and every day I fail to find the evil that I am looking for. If I cannot find this man, however, I can use the head of the prior—it would do admirably, but I have hesitated for fear of hurting his feelings.”

Ludovico slapped his knees and roared with laughter. There were no more complaints.

Finally, in 1498, the scaffolding was removed from the painting and Leonardo’s masterpiece was revealed. The twelve apostles grouped at the table are shown each responding in his own way to the words of Christ, “One of you shall betray me.” Again hundreds flocked to see this latest marvel of Leonardo’s. Its striking influence was felt by generations of painters. Even now, more than four hundred and fifty years later, the world still comes to stand before the genius of Leonardo da Vinci in the refectory of Santa Maria delle Grazie.

The clouds of war were gathering again over Italy. In April of 1498, Charles VIII of France died and his successor was Louis of Orleans, who became Louis XII. The new King of France laid claim to the Dukedom of Milan, and Ludovico again tried to form an alliance against him. But the years of juggling enemy against enemy and friend against friend were now coming to an end. No one trusted Il Moro any more, and suddenly he realized that he was to be alone in this new fight. After nearly twenty years of power sustained by powerful alliances, Ludovico was forced to turn to his own people of Lombardy. Frantically he tried to correct the injustices of years. The people had been cruelly taxed to support the extravagances of the Sforza court, and, in addition, they had been badly treated by petty government officials. Ludovico now sought to repay the past miseries of his people and to rally them to his support. In such a spirit he remembered his court painter, Leonardo da Vinci, and gave him a vineyard and considerable piece of land not far from the Porta Vercellina.

Now, for the first time in his life, Leonardo knew financial security. With the income from the vineyard, and in the peace of his estate, he was left free to follow his own researches. He took no notice that his “peace” was surrounded by the threat of war. Indeed, he remained aloof from politics and court intrigues as much as was possible for a man living in the midst of such chaotic times.

Leonardo now had the opportunity to follow up an early interest—the study of plants. He made many beautiful drawings; no plant was too small to catch his eye. His notes on botany began to grow. With his genius for observation and analysis of nature, Leonardo made some extraordinary discoveries of botanical laws entirely unknown before his time. He wrote of the phenomenon of heliotropism, or the movement of plants toward or away from the sunlight. In addition, he described the phenomenon known as geotropism, or the growth of plants according to gravitational law, as for example, roots growing downward and shoots growing upward. He also defined the laws of phyllotaxis, which describe the system or order of leaf arrangement on a plant’s stem. That is, leaves are arranged spirally around a stem so that the third leaf above grows out over the third leaf below on one type of plant; or, on another type, the two third leaves are over the two third leaves below. The same natural laws apply to the branches of plants as well; they occur so that every leaf and branch can receive sufficient air and light. Amazingly enough, these laws, which Leonardo described so completely, were not rediscovered until almost two centuries later!

Leonardo went even further in his botanical studies. He experimented with gourds, planting them in various aqueous solutions; this anticipated modern methods of growing plants in chemicals. He also tested the actions of arsenic and mercury poisons in plants. He reproduced the shape and form of leaves by pressing them on paper coated with lampblack, a method that was not used again until the nineteenth century. Carefully noted, too, in his writings was the rising of sap from the roots to the branches by capillary action; this, too, was not rediscovered until much later—in the eighteenth century. Leonardo also extracted oils and essences from flowers and studied the influences of altitude on the development of vegetation. Indeed Leonardo’s very approaches to a systematic classification of plants were the forerunners of modern methods of classifying.

In the seclusion of his own home, as he continued his studies of geometry with Pacioli, Leonardo again turned to his observations of the heavens. On the roof of his house he had set up a small observatory for watching the sky at night. Often he looked at the stars through a pinhole in a sheet of paper. Leonardo did this to stop the “twinkling” of the stars which he recognized as an optical illusion. Moreover, by looking at the stars in this manner, he noticed that some were larger than others, and imagined to himself how our own earth might look from them. Would we not be but another “star” in a vast collection of stars? And if that were true—how could the earth be the center of the universe? By the same imaginary reasoning, he speculated on how we must look to someone on the moon. Realizing that the moonlight on earth faintly illuminates the dark side of the earth, he reasoned that then there must be an “earthlight” doing the same on the moon. Thus he was the first to explain the dim reflected light on the dark side of the moon. Moreover, Leonardo is known to have looked at the moon through a convex lens, and perhaps even a form of telescope. Indeed, he had built telescopic-type tubes with lenses in them and had written directions for their use. It seems certain that at about this time Leonardo became convinced of the heliocentric theory, the theory that states the sun is the center of our universe. On a sheet of mathematical notes Leonardo wrote in large letters, “the sun does not move.”

During this time he continued to seek out books on astronomy. Leonardo was familiar with Aristotle’s Meteorology, Archimedes’ On the Center of Gravity, and with Problems in Aristotle’s Books of the Sky and the World, a work by Albert of Saxony. This last book Leonardo had to read with the help of a Latin dictionary, because his Latin was not good. He had already read Plutarch, who had defined the moon as a solid. Plutarch had written further that the “spots” on the moon were the result of shadows cast by irregularities on its surface. This theory, that was apparently abandoned during the Middle Ages, supported the conclusions that Leonardo had reached by his own observations. But he still struggled against a mistaken idea of his own. For a long while he maintained that there were seas and waters upon the moon which accounted for the sunlight being reflected so brilliantly.

Meanwhile, in July of 1499, the French army had reached Lombardy. Ludovico was now in a state of desperation. He tried to appeal to the people of Milan, explaining that their heavy taxes had been due to the constant threats from abroad. But, however hard he tried to arouse their sense of loyalty to him, the public of Milan turned a deaf ear. They had not forgotten how Ludovico had allied himself with Charles VIII—a foreign king! Ludovico now had to put his trust in his army commander, Galeazzo da Sanseverino, despite warnings that this was a man of doubtful loyalty. Moreover, to make matters worse, Louis XII had succeeded in forming an alliance against Ludovico; and, among his allies was a powerful cardinal, son of Pope Alexander VI—the notorious Cesare Borgia.