Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
Unable ever to join and form connections | |
Or stay connected or to grow by increase. | |
But plain fact shows that both these things do happen: | 565 |
Things can be born, and being born can grow. | |
Therefore it is obvious that an infinite number | |
Of primal atoms exists of every kind | |
So as to maintain the supply of everything. | |
Thus never can the motions of destruction | |
Prevail for ever, entombing life for ever, | 570 |
Nor can the motions of creation and growth | |
Forever keep intact what they have fashioned. | |
Thus the war waged between the primal atoms | |
Is fought from infinity on equal terms. | |
Now here, now there, the vital powers in things | 575 |
Vanquish and in turn are vanquished. The funeral dirge | |
Blends with the wailing of the infant child | |
When first newborn it sees the shores of light. | |
No night has followed day, no dawn a night, | |
That has not heard, mixed with those fretful cries, | |
Laments that march with death and death’s dark obsequies. | 580 |
Now here’s another thing you should keep signed and sealed | |
And locked and treasured in your memory: | |
That there is nothing, among all things visible, | |
That consists of one kind of atom only; | |
Nothing that is not a mixture of elements. | 585 |
The more qualities and powers a thing possesses, | |
The more it tells that it has great quantity | |
Of different atoms and of varied shapes. | |
Firstly, the earth holds atoms in itself | |
From which the springs, their coolness welling forth, | 590 |
Continually renew the boundless sea. | |
It holds those atoms too whence fires are born. | |
The surface of the earth in many a place | |
Is set alight and burns, while from deep down | |
The fires arise that kindle Etna’s fury. | |
Further, it holds the means to raise bright crops | |
And joyful orchards for the race of men, | 595 |
And rivers too and leaves and joyful pastures | |
For creatures of the wild that range the hills. | |
Therefore the earth and earth alone is named | |
Great Mother of the Gods, Mother of beasts, | |
And procreatress of our human frame. | |
Of her of old the Grecian poets sang | 600 |
Learned in ancient lore; a goddess she | |
In chariot seated by two lions drawn; | |
Teaching thereby that the world’s mighty mass | |
Hangs fast in space, and earth cannot rest on earth. | |
They yoked wild beasts to show that stubborn children | |
Must be subdued by parents’ loving care. | 605 |
Upon her head they set a mural crown | |
Because established safe on chosen heights | |
Well fortified she bears the weight of cities. | |
In solemn state the image thus adorned | |
Of the holy Mother is borne now through the world. | |
And different peoples in their ancient rites | 610 |
Name her Idaean Mother; and Phrygians | |
They appoint escort since from there, they say, | |
First came the corn that spreads now through the world. | |
Eunuchs they give her, wishing thus to show | |
That those who violate the Mother’s godhead | 615 |
And have been found ungrateful to their parents | |
Must be accounted shameful and unworthy | |
To bring live offspring into the shores of light. | |
On tight-drawn drums palms thunder, cymbals clash, | |
Horns blare their hoarse threats out, the hollow pipe | |
Thrills every heart with Phrygian melodies. | 620 |
Next spears are borne before her, savage signs | |
Of force, to terrify the crowd’s ungrateful minds | |
And impious hearts with fear of power divine. | |
Therefore when first she rides through some great city, | |
And silent, with unspoken benediction | 625 |
Blesses mankind, much copper then and silver | |
They strew along her way in rich largesse, | |
And with a snow of roses falling, falling | |
Shadow the Mother and her retinue. | |
Next comes an armed band dancing, fired with blood, | |
Leaping in rhythm midst the Phrygian throng, | 630 |
Shaking their awful crests with nodding heads. | |
These the Greeks name Curetes. They recall | |
Dicte’s Curetes who, the story tells, | |
In Crete once drowned the infant cries of Jove. | |
A band of boys around the baby boy | 635 |
All armed and nimbly dancing, keeping time, | |
Clashed bronze on bronze, lest Saturn find the child | |
And seize and crush him in his jaws, and deal | |
The Mother’s heart an everlasting wound. | |
Therefore in arms the Great Mother they escort, | 640 |
Or else to show the goddess’ high command | |
That they in arms and valour strong be ready | |
To defend their native land, and to their parents | |
Protection give and pride for all to see. | |
All this is well and admirably told. | |
It is, however, far removed from truth. | 645 |
For perfect peace gods by their very nature | |
Must of necessity enjoy, and immortal life, | |
Far separate, far removed from our affairs. | |
For free from every sorrow, every danger, | |
Strong in their own powers, needing naught from us, | 650 |
They are not won by gifts nor touched by anger. | |
Indeed the earth is now and has been always | |
Devoid entirely of any kind of feeling. | |
The reason why it brings forth many things | |
In many ways into the light of sun | |
Is that it holds a multitude of atoms. | |
If anyone decides to call the sea Neptune, | 655 |
And corn Ceres, and misuse the name of Bacchus | |
Rather than give grape juice its proper title, | |
Let us agree that he can call the earth | |
Mother of the Gods, on this condition— | |
That he refuses to pollute his mind | |
With the foul poison of religion. | 660 |
We often see grazing the fields together | |
Under the same wide canopy of heaven | |
Sheep in their woolly flocks, the martial breed | |
Of horses, and the horned herds of cattle, | |
Quenching their thirst all from a single stream, | |
And yet to each life gives a different shape, | 665 |
And each retains the nature of its parents, | |
Each after its kind copies their behaviour. | |
So great is the variety of matter | |
In every kind of herbage, every river. | |
Moreover every animal of every kind | |
Is made of bones, blood, veins, heat, moisture, flesh, and sinews, | 670 |
And all of these are widely different, | |
Being formed of atoms differently shaped. | |
Again, whatever can be set on fire | |
And burnt, for sure must hide within its body, | |
If nothing else, at least the matter needed | |
To generate flame and fire and send out light, | 675 |
And make sparks fly and scatter glowing embers. | |
And all the rest, if with like reasoning | |
You run through them in your mind, you’ll find they have | |
The seeds of many things hidden inside them | |
And make combinations of atoms of various shapes. | |
Again, you see many things have colour and taste | 680 |
Together with smell. Chief among these might be | |
Burnt offerings smoking on some holy altar. | |
These therefore must be made of various shapes. | |
For scent can permeate the human frame | |
Where colour cannot go; and colour glides | |
Into the senses separately from taste. | |
Thus you’ll recognize that their atoms have different shapes. | 685 |
Different shapes therefore combine in a single mass | |
And all things are composed of a mixture of seeds. | |
Everywhere in my verses you can see | |
Many letters common to many words, | |
Although it is obvious that both words and verses | 690 |
Are different and composed of different letters. | |
Not that there are not many letters common | |
To separate words, or that no two words consist | |
Of the same letters, but as a general rule | |
Words are not made up of the same letters. | |
Likewise in other things, though many atoms | 695 |
Are common to many things, yet combined together | |
They can make a whole quite different in substance. | |
So that the human race and crops and fruitful trees | |