Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
Or rising in such a way that a unity | |
Is made of all; for else must heat and wind | 285 |
Apart, and the power of air apart, destroy | |
The senses and apart dissolve them. | |
That heat is also in the mind when anger | |
Boils, and fire flashes fiercely from the eyes; | |
And cold is too, fear’s chill companion, when | 290 |
It makes the flesh to creep and shakes the limbs. | |
And then there is that calm and peaceful air | |
Which comes from tranquil heart and face serene. | |
But more of heat there is in those whose hearts | |
And bitter minds flash easily into wrath. | 295 |
Lions are most like this, that growl and roar | |
And cannot contain the fury in their breasts. | |
But the cold mind of the stag has more of wind | |
That sends cold airs more quickly through his flesh | 300 |
Which cause a quivering movement in the limbs. | |
But the cow lives more by peaceful air. She’s not | |
Too much excited by the smokey torch | |
Of anger spreading darkness all around, | |
Nor pierced and frozen with cold shafts of fear. | 305 |
She stands between the two—stags and fierce lions. | |
So also is it with the race of men. | |
By schooling many achieve an equal gloss, | |
But the character they’re born with still remains. | |
And faults you cannot tear up by the roots, | 310 |
So that one man can hold his temper better, | |
Another be less of a coward or a third | |
Accept insults too readily. For men | |
In many other ways must differ, and | |
Their habits follow from their different natures. | 315 |
I cannot now explain the causes of these | |
Or list the names of all those primal things | |
Which give to nature such variety. | |
One thing for sure I can affirm is this: | |
The traces of these things which stay in us | 320 |
Beyond the power of reason to expel | |
Are so minute that nothing can prevent | |
Our living lives on earth like those of gods. | |
This spirit then is contained in every body, | |
Itself the body’s guardian, and source | |
Of its existence; for with common roots | 325 |
They cling together, and without destruction | |
Cannot be torn apart, like frankincense, | |
You can’t tear out the scent from lumps of it | |
Without its very nature being destroyed. | |
So from the body if mind and spirit be | |
Withdrawn, total collapse of all must follow, | 330 |
So interwoven are the elements | |
From their first origin, which constitute | |
Their common life; and neither body nor mind | |
Has power of feeling, one without the other, | |
But by the joint movements of both united | 335 |
Sensation is kindled for us in the flesh. | |
Besides, a body is never born by itself | |
Nor grows, nor ever lasts long after death. | |
For not as water when it gives off heat | |
Does not disintegrate, but remains entire, | 340 |
Not thus I say can the body endure division | |
From the spirit which has left it. But utterly | |
It perishes convulsed and rots away. | |
Likewise, when life begins, in a mother’s limbs | |
And womb, body and spirit learn so well | 345 |
The ways of life, that if they are separated | |
Damage and ruin follow instantly. | |
So since their life depends upon this unity | |
Their nature also must be unified. | |
Also, if anyone denies that body can feel | 350 |
And believes that spirit, mixed through the whole body, | |
Creates this motion which we name feeling, | |
He fights against things manifest and true. | |
For who can ever make clear what it is | |
For the body to feel, if not the obvious | |
Experience which the body has given us? | 355 |
But once the spirit has left it, then the body | |
Lacks feeling in every part, because it loses | |
That which in life was not its property; | |
And many other things it loses too. | |
Moreover to say that eyes can see nothing | |
But through them mind looks out, as through a door, | 360 |
Is difficult, when sense clearly rejects it. | |
For sense propels us to the object seen; | |
Especially since we often cannot see | |
Bright things because of glaring brightness, a thing | |
Which never happens with doors. For an open door | |
Through which we look presents no difficulty. | 365 |
Moreover, if our eyes act as a door | |
Well, take the eyes away, doorposts and all, | |
And then You’ll find the mind should see more clearly. | |
Now here’s a thing you never could accept, | 370 |
A view held by the great Democritus, | |
That primal atoms of body and mind are placed | |
One beside one alternately in pairs | |
And in this manner bind the frame together. | |
For, while the seeds of spirit are much smaller | 375 |
Than those which make our body and our flesh, | |
Also they are fewer in number and are placed | |
Only at wide intervals through the frame. | |
The intervals at which these atoms lie | |
Equal in size the size of the smallest thing | |
That can produce sensation in our bodies. | 380 |
Sometimes we do not feel a speck of dust | |
Clinging to the body, or chalk-powder whitening | |
Our limbs, nor mist at night; nor spider’s webs | |
When we move into them, or the web’s fine threads | |
Falling upon our heads, nor feathers of birds | 385 |
Or flying thistledown, which are so light | |
They scarce can fall to the ground. A caterpillar | |
Or other creeping thing, we can’t feel it walking; | |
Nor the separate footsteps of a gnat or fly. | 390 |
So fine it is that many particles | |
Must be moved in us before, spread through our limbs, | |
The first beginnings of spirit can be touched | |
And feel, and bouncing across those intervals | |
Combine and couple and spring apart in turn. | 395 |
The mind more strongly holds the barriers | |
Of life, than does the spirit, and is lord | |
Of life more than the spirit is. For without | |
Mind and intelligence no particle | |
Of spirit for the smallest length of time | |
Can stay in our limbs, but all too easily | |
Follows its companions into the air away | |
And leaves the limbs cold in the chill of death. | 400 |
But he remains in life to whom the mind | |
And intelligence remain. Though he may be | |
A mutilated trunk dismembered, and | |
The spirit fled and banished from the limbs, | |
Yet he lives, and breathes the air of life. Cut off | 405 |
If not from all yet from the greater part | |
Of the spirit, yet he lingers, and clings to life. | |
Consider the eye, if it is cut all round, | |
Provided that the pupil stays unhurt | |
The lively power of seeing abides intact; | |
Unless, that is, you damage the whole eyeball | 410 |
And slicing round it leave it quite cut out, | |
For that results in ruin to them both. | |
But if that tiny spot in the middle of the eye | |
Is eaten through, at once the light is out | |
And darkness follows, however bright it be | |
With eyeball safe. Such is the bond by which | 415 |
The mind and spirit are forever bound. | |
Well now, that you may know that mind and spirit | |
Are born in living creatures and are mortal, | |
Verses which I with labour sweet and long | |
Have wrought, I’ll give you, worthy of your name. | 420 |
Please now apply both these names to one thing; | |
When for example I speak of spirit and show | |
That it is mortal, understand me also | |
To speak of mind since it is one with the other | |
And the whole is combined. First, as I have shown | |
That it is thin, composed of tiny atoms, | |
And of much smaller elements consists | 425 |
Than the liquid of water, or cloud or smoke, | |
For it moves far more quickly and behaves | |
As if struck by some more delicate force, for dreams | |
Of smoke and mist can move it, imaginations | 430 |
We have in sleep of altars burning and smoke | |
Coming from them (since beyond doubt these are | |