Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
Images borne to us that we see in sleep)— | |
Now therefore, when you see from a broken pot | |
Water or liquid spread out all around | 435 |
And see how cloud and smoke dissolve into air, | |
Believe that the spirit also is diffused | |
And much more quickly dies and is dissolved | |
Into its primal atoms once it has left | |
The limbs. And if the body which is its vessel, | 440 |
As it were, cannot hold it when broken up | |
By anything, or rarefied when blood | |
Flows out from the veins, how then do you suppose | |
That any air could hold it? How could a thing | |
More rarefied than our body ever hold it? | |
We feel moreover that the mind is born | 445 |
Together with the body and grows up with it, | |
And ages with it. Children run about | |
With weak and tender bodies, and their minds | |
Are tender too. Next, when maturing years | |
Have given them strength, the wisdom and the power | |
Of mind grows stronger also. Last, when time | 450 |
With its strong hours has marred them, and the limbs | |
Have fallen beneath its blows, the intelligence | |
Limps, the tongue rambles, the mind gives way, | |
All fails and in one single moment dies. | 455 |
Therefore it follows that like smoke the spirit | |
Is melted into air, into thin air, | |
Since with the body equally it is born | |
And grows, and dies when old age wearies it. | |
Another point: just as the body itself | |
Is prone to foul diseases and harsh pain, | 460 |
So we can see the mind to suffer also | |
Anxiety and grief and fear; it follows | |
That the mind equally partakes of death. | |
Moreover, even in bodily diseases, | |
Often the mind wanders astray, demented, | |
Delirious; sometimes the heavy weight | |
Of lethargy brings everlasting sleep, | 465 |
Closed eyes and drooping head; no voices now | |
He hears, nor looks can recognize, of friends | |
Standing beside the bed, calling him back | |
To light and life, their cheeks bedewed with tears. | |
Wherefore you must confess that the mind also | 470 |
Is dissolved, since the contagion of disease | |
Penetrates into it, and disease and pain | |
Make death, as well we have been taught ere now. | |
Now let’s consider wine. When its strong power | 475 |
Has entered into a man and through the veins | |
Its fire has spread, then what a weight is there | |
In all his limbs! His legs give way, he staggers, | |
His speech is slow, his mind is sodden, his eyes | |
Swim, and he shouts and belches and fights. He’s drunk. | 480 |
Why does this happen, why, I say, unless | |
Because the spirit, whole still in the body, | |
Is shaken by the violence of wine? | |
But this confusion and impediment | |
Shows that if something slightly stronger should | 485 |
Find its way in, then robbed of his future life | |
The man must die. Now, take another case— | |
A man’s struck suddenly before our eyes | |
As if by lightning, falls to the ground and foams | |
At the mouth, shudders and groans and raves, grows rigid, | |
Twists, pants, convulsions rack him. Why? for sure | 490 |
Because the force of the disease spread through the limbs | |
Tears him and spews the spirit out in foam, | |
As when the sea is lashed by violent waves. | |
Groans are forced out since limbs are racked with pain, | 495 |
And gathering in the mouth the seeds of voice | |
Rush out, as it were along the road they know. | |
Raving occurs because the mind and spirit | |
Are racked and torn and, as I have shown, divided | 500 |
By that same poison, drawn apart, split up. | |
Then when at last the disease is spent, and back | |
To its secret haunts the bitter humour goes | |
Of the corrupted being, swaying then | |
A man begins to rise, and by degrees | |
Returns to his full senses and receives | |
His spirit back. Now therefore, since the spirit | 505 |
Within the body itself by such diseases | |
Is tossed about and worn and torn apart, | |
Why do you think that without a body the same | |
In the open air, blown by strong winds, can live? | |
And when we see that the mind like a sick body | 510 |
Can be restored to health by medicine, | |
This also shows that the living mind is mortal. | |
For if a man sets out to change the mind | |
Or anything in nature, then he must | 515 |
Remove a part, however small, or add one, | |
Or change its position. But what is immortal | |
Suffers no change of its parts, nor anything added | |
Or taken away. Its boundaries are fixed; | |
Transgress them, and death follows instantly. | 520 |
Therefore, as I have taught, a sick mind shows | |
Signs of mortality and equally | |
A mind that’s changed by medicine. So strongly | |
Does truth oppose false reasoning and cuts off | |
The flight of lies in full retreat surrounded, | |
And by a double refutation conquers them. | 525 |
Another point—we often see how a man | |
Passes slowly away and limb by limb | |
Loses the sense of life. First toes grow livid | |
And then the nails, and then the feet and legs | |
Die, and then over all his body creep | |
The cold footsteps of death. And so we see | 530 |
The spirit’s divided, and does not depart | |
All at one time. This shows that it is mortal. | |
But if perchance you think the spirit can | |
Pull itself inwards through the limbs, and draw | |
All of its parts together and in this way | |
Remove sensation from the limbs, why then | |
The place where all this spirit collects should be | 535 |
More sensitive, and form a single seat of feeling. | |
Nowhere does this exist. And so the spirit, | |
As I have said before, is torn to pieces, | |
Scattered abroad, and therefore perishes. | |
Moreover, if I were prepared to lie, | 540 |
And grant you that the spirit could form a mass | |
Within the body of those who leave the light | |
Slowly, and slowly die, you must confess | |
That the spirit is mortal. For whether it dies | |
Dispersed into the air or drawn together | |
From all its parts, it matters not at all; | 545 |
Since more and more the senses leave a man | |
Everywhere, and less and less of life remains. | |
The mind has its own place within the body | |
Fixed, just as eyes and ears are fixed, and noses, | |
And the other organs of sense that govern life; | 550 |
If they’re cut off, they’re useless, only fit | |
For the dustbin. Likewise by itself the mind | |
Is useless, can’t exist without the body, | |
Which holds it like a jar holds water or | 555 |
Whatever simile you care to choose | |
Of closeness, since the body clings to it. | |
In close conjunction body and mind are strong | |
With quickened power, enjoying life together. | |
Nor without body can the mind alone | 560 |
Make living movements, nor deprived of mind | |
Can body last, and use the senses. Eyes | |
Torn from their roots can see nothing. Likewise | |
Mind and spirit alone can do nothing. | 565 |
Yes, mixed through veins and flesh, sinews and bones | |
Their elements are held in by the body, | |
Not free to spring apart; and so, shut in, | |
They act as sense-bringers, which after death | 570 |
They cannot do, ejected from the body | |
Into the winds of air, held in no more. | |
For air will be a body and have life | |
If the spirit can keep itself together, and | |
Enclose within itself those motions which | |
It used to make within the limbs and body. | |
Wherefore again and yet again I say | 576 |
When all the body’s clothing is undone | |
And the breath of life’s thrown out outside, at once | |
Mind meets its end, and spirit too, since both | |
Are by one cause united and combined. | |
Again, since body cannot endure division | 580 |
From spirit without it dies with loathsome stench, | |
Why do you doubt the cause of this? The spirit | |
From its deep depths arising has like smoke | |