Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
Barren of sound and starved of taste they move. | |
Their bodies emit no odour of their own. | 845 |
When you set out to make a pleasing scent | |
From marjoram or myrrh or the sweet flower | |
Of spikenard breathing nectar to our nostrils | |
Among the first things that you need to seek | |
Is an oil that is, so far as you may find one, | 850 |
Odourless and emits no breath of anything. | |
For this will least with harsh taint of its own | |
Corrupt the scents concocted with its substance. | |
For the same reason atoms must not bring | |
An odour of their own in making things, | 855 |
Nor sound, since they can emit nothing from themselves, | |
Nor similarly taste of any kind, | |
Nor cold likewise nor heat nor gentle warmth | |
And all the rest. All these are perishable— | |
The softness of their substance makes them pliant, | |
Its hollowness porous, its brittleness makes them crumble— | 860 |
All must be kept well separate from atoms, | |
If we wish to lay a strong and sure foundation, | |
Immortal, on which the sum of life may rest; | |
Lest you find all things utterly returned to nothing. | |
Now here is another point. Things that we see have feeling | 865 |
Consist of atoms that are devoid of feeling. | |
Nor do things plainly known to us | |
And manifest refute this or fight against it. | |
Rather they take us by the hand and make us believe | |
That living things, as I say, are born from insentient atoms. | 870 |
Why, you can see that living worms emerge | |
From filthy dung when the wet earth is soaked | |
And rotted by unseasonable rains. | |
All other things are seen likewise to change. | |
Rivers and leaves and joyful pastures change | 875 |
Into cattle, and cattle change into our bodies, | |
And often too our bodies build the strength | |
Of wild beasts and winged masters of the air. | |
So nature turns all foods to living bodies | |
And from them makes all the senses of animals | 880 |
In much the same way as she makes dry logs | |
Unfold in flames and turns them into fire. | |
Now do you see how very important is | |
The order in which all the atoms are placed, | |
How they combine, what motions they give and take? | 885 |
What is it then that strikes the mind itself | |
And moves it, and compels it to express | |
Ideas which forbid you to believe | |
That the sentient comes from the insentient? | |
Doubtless it is that a mixture of water and logs | |
And earth cannot produce a vital sense. | 890 |
And here you will please bear this in mind: | |
I do not say that all the substances | |
Which produce sentient bodies always do so. | |
It all depends how small the atoms are | |
That make a sentient thing, what shapes they have, | 895 |
What motions and arrangements and positions. | |
None of these things is found in wood or clods, | |
Yet these, when rotted as it were by rain, | |
Produce small worms, because the bodies of matter, | |
Moved by a new thing from their ancient order, | 900 |
Combine in a way that must make living creatures. | |
Further, those who maintain that sentient things | |
Can be created from things sentient, | |
Themselves from other sentient things created, | |
Make the foundations of our senses perishable, | |
Because they make them soft; for all sensation | |
Is linked with flesh, veins, sinews, all of which | 905 |
Being soft consist of substance which is mortal. | |
However, let us assume, for the sake of argument, | |
That these things last for ever. Then they must | |
Either have the sensation of a part | |
Or else instead be like whole animals. | |
But parts can have no feeling by themselves: | 910 |
Sensation in our limbs involves the whole body. | |
A hand or any part severed from the body | |
Cannot retain sensation on its own. | |
It follows that they are like whole animals. | |
So they must have the same feelings as ourselves | 915 |
So as to share in all our vital senses. | |
How then can they be called first elements | |
And escape the paths of death? They are animate, | |
And animate and mortal are the same. | |
Even if they could, their unions and combinations | 920 |
Would make nothing more than a crowd of living things, | |
Any more than men and cattle and wild beasts | |
By combination could make anything. | |
But if they were to give up from their bodies | |
Their own power of feeling, and acquire another one, | |
What was the point of giving them in the first place | 925 |
What is taken away? Besides, as we saw before, | |
Since we see eggs of birds produce live chicks | |
And worms swarm out when by untimely rains | |
Earth has been rotted, then we may be sure | |
That sense can be produced from the insentient. | 930 |
Suppose, however, someone should maintain | |
That sense can indeed arise from the insentient, | |
But is produced by some process of change | |
Or by some kind of birth that gives it being, | |
It will suffice to prove quite clearly to him | |
That birth does not occur without previous union, | 935 |
And nothing changes except by combination. | |
There can be no sensation in any body | |
Until the living thing itself is born; | |
Because of course its matter is held dispersed | |
In air and rivers and earth and earth-born things, | 940 |
And has not yet assembled, nor combined | |
Within itself the vitalizing motions | |
By which the all-perceiving senses kindled | |
See to the safety of all living things. | |
Consider this also: some living creature | |
Is suddenly prostrated by a blow | |
More powerful than its nature can withstand, | 945 |
And all the senses then of mind and body | |
Are stunned, and thrown at once into confusion. | |
For all the arrangements of the primal atoms | |
Are broken up, the vital motions checked | |
Deep down inside, until the substance fails, | |
Battered through every limb, and loosens all | |
The vital knots that bind the soul to body | 950 |
And scatters it, forced out through every pore. | |
What else are we to think a blow can do | |
Than shatter what it strikes and break it up? | |
And often, when a blow strikes with less force, | |
The vital motions that remain will win, | 955 |
Yes, win, and calm its vast disturbances, | |
Recalling every part to its own course | |
And shattering the impetus of death | |
Now all but lord and master of the body, | |
Kindling once more sensations almost lost. | |
How else could creatures at the door of death | 960 |
Return to life, their minds restored again, | |
Rather than make their exit by a route | |
They have travelled almost to the end, and pass away? | |
Pain occurs when particles of matter | |
Attacked by some force in the limbs and flesh | |
Quiver and tremble in their deep abodes; | 965 |
And when they settle back into their places | |
That is a soothing joy. So you may know | |
That atoms cannot suffer any pain | |
Nor in themselves experience any pleasure, | |
Since they possess no primal particles | |
From whose new movements they might feel distress | 970 |
Or reap some fruit of life-giving delight. | |
Therefore they cannot be endowed with senses. | |
And if, to enable animals to feel, | |
We must attribute senses to their atoms, | |
What are we then to say about those atoms | |
Which give the human race its character? | 975 |
Doubtless they shake their sides and rock with laughter | |
And weeping oft bedew their cheeks with tears, | |
Engage in long and brilliant disputation | |
About the mix of things that makes the world, | |
And then proceed to enquire about themselves | |
To find what atoms they themselves are made of. | |
For if they resemble complete mortal men, | 980 |
They must also consist of other particles | |
And those in turn of others, and then others; | |
There’s nowhere you could dare to call a halt. | |