Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
Can never fill it. Cerberus and the Furies | 1010 |
Dwell in that land where daylight never comes, | |
They say, and Tartarus flames belching out; | |
And none of these exist, nor ever can. | |
But in this life there is fear of punishment | |
For evil deeds, fear no less terrible | |
Than the deeds themselves, and expiation of crime, | 1015 |
Prison, and the dread hurling from the rock, | |
Stripes, torturers, dungeons, red-hot plates, | |
Firebrands, and even if all of these be spared | |
The guilty conscience filled with wild foreboding | |
Applies the goad and scorches itself with whips, | |
Seeing no end to all these miseries, | 1020 |
No final limit to its punishment, | |
And fears that after death there’s worse to come. | |
So fools make for themselves a Hell on earth. | |
Now here is something you might say to yourself: | |
‘Even good Ancus lost the sight of day, | 1025 |
A better man than you, you rogue, by far. | |
And many kings and powers after him | |
Have fallen, rulers of great states and nations. | |
And he who laid a highway through the sea | |
And o’er the deep a road for armies made, | 1030 |
Taught them to walk across the briny lake | |
And spurned the roaring waves with his cavalry, | |
He also lost the glorious light of day | |
And dying poured his spirit from his body. | |
Great Scipio, the thunderbolt of war, | |
Terror of Carthage, gave to earth his bones | |
As though he had been the humblest of his slaves. | 1035 |
Add men that found out things of science and beauty | |
Add all the brotherhood of Helicon, | |
Whose one and only king throughout the ages | |
Homer lies now in sleep with all the rest. | |
Democritus, when a mature old age | |
Warned him his mind and memory were fading, | 1040 |
Offered his head right willingly to death. | |
Epicurus himself died when the light of life | |
Had run its course, he who in genius | |
Surpassed the race of men, outshone them all | |
As the sun risen in heaven outshines the stars. | |
And you, will you doubt and feel aggrieved to die? | 1045 |
Already, while you live and see, your life | |
Is all but dead. You waste most of your time | |
In sleep. You snore while wide awake; and dream | |
Incessantly; and always in your mind | |
You’re plagued with fear that’s meaningless, and often | |
You can’t make out what is wrong with you, oppressed, | 1050 |
You drunken wretch, by cares on every side, | |
And drift on shifting tides of fantasy.’ | |
If they could see, those men who know they feel | |
A burden on their minds that wearies them, | |
If they could also know the causes of it | 1055 |
And whence so great a pile of woe lies on them, | |
They’ld never live as most of them do now | |
Each ignorant of what he wants and seeking always | |
By change of place to lay his burden down. | |
A man leaves his great house because he’s bored | 1060 |
With life at home, and suddenly returns, | |
Finding himself no happier abroad. | |
He rushes off to his villa driving like mad, | |
You’ld think he’s going to a house on fire, | |
And yawns before he’s put his foot inside, | 1065 |
Or falls asleep and seeks oblivion, | |
Or even rushes back to town again. | |
So each man flies from himself (vain hope, because | |
It clings to him the more closely against his will) | |
And hates himself because he is sick in mind | |
And does not know the cause of his disease. | 1070 |
Which if he clearly saw, at once he would | |
Leave everything, and study first to know | |
The nature of the world. For what is in question | |
Is not of one hour but of eternity, | |
The state in which all mortals after death | |
Must needs remain for all remaining time. | 1075 |
And what is this great and evil lust of life | |
That drives and tosses us in doubt and peril? | |
A certain end of life is fixed for men. | |
There is no escape from death and we must die. | |
Again, we live and move and have our being | |
In the same place always, and no new pleasure | 1080 |
By living longer can be hammered out. | |
But while we can’t get what we want, that seems | |
Of all things most desirable. Once got, | |
We must have something else. One constant thirst | |
Of life besets us ever open-mouthed. | |
And there is doubt what fortunes later years | |
And chance may bring us and what end awaits. | 1085 |
Nor by prolonging life, one single second | |
Do we deduct from the long years of death. | |
Nor have we strength to make in any way | |
Our time less long once death has come to us. | |
Live though you may through all ages that you wish, | 1090 |
No less that eternal death will still await, | |
And no less long a time will be no more | |
He who today from light his exit made | |
Than he who perished months and years ago. | |
A pathless country of the Pierides | |
I traverse, where no foot has ever trod. | |
A joy it is to come to virgin springs | |
And drink, a joy it is to pluck new flowers, | |
To make a glorious garland for my head | |
From fields whose blooms the Muses never picked | 5 |
To crown the brows of any man before. | |
First, since of matters high I make my theme, | |
Proceeding to set free the minds of men | |
Bound by the tight knots of religion. | |
Next, since of things so dark in verse so clear | |
I write, and touch all things with the Muses’ charm. | |
In this no lack of purpose may be seen. | 10 |
For as with children, when the doctors try | |
To give them loathsome wormwood, first they smear | |
Sweet yellow honey on the goblet’s rim, | |
That childhood all unheeding may be deceived | |
At the lip’s edge, and so drink up the juice | 15 |
Of bitter medicine, tricked but not betrayed, | |
And by such means gain health and strength again, | |
So now do I: for oft my doctrine seems | |
Distasteful to those that have not sampled it | |
And most shrink back from it. My purpose is | |
With the sweet voices of Pierian song | 20 |
To expound my doctrine, and as it were to touch it | |
With the delicious honey of the Muses; | |
So in this way perchance my poetry | |
Can hold your mind, while you attempt to grasp | |
The nature of the world, and understand | |
Its value and its usefulness to men. | 25 |
And since I have shown the nature of the mind, | |
What it consists of, and how combined with body | |
It flourishes, and how when torn away | |
From the body it returns to its first elements, | |
Now I address a matter of great import | |
For our enquiries, and I show that there | |
Exist what we call images of things; | 30 |
Which as it were peeled off from the surfaces | |
Of objects, fly this way and that through the air; | |
These same, encountering us in wakeful hours, | |
Terrify our minds, and also in sleep, as when | |
We see strange shapes and phantoms of the dead | 35 |
Which often as in slumber sunk we lay | |
Have roused us in horror; lest perchance we think | |
That spirits escape from Acheron, or ghosts | |
Flit among the living, or that after death | |
Something of us remains when once the body | |
And mind alike together have been destroyed, | 40 |
And each to its primal atoms has dissolved. | |
I say therefore that likenesses or thin shapes | 41 |
Are sent out from the surfaces of things | 42 |
Which we must call as it were their films or bark | 43 |
Because the image bears the look and shape | 51 |
Of the body from which it came, as it floats in the air. | 52 |
And this the dullest brain can recognize: | 53 |
In the first place, since within the range of vision | 44 |
Many things throw off bodies, some rarefied | 55 |
As bonfires throw off smoke or fires heat, | |
And others denser and more closely knit | |
Like the thin coats cicadas often drop | |
In summer, and when calves in birth throw off | |
The caul from the body’s surface, or when snakes | 60 |
Slough off their skins on thorns, and so we see | |
Brambles bedizened with their fluttering spoils. | |
Since these things happen, thin images also | |
Must be thrown off from the surface of things; | |
For if those other things fall, there is no reason, | 65 |
No whisper of one, why these thinnest films | |
Should not also and all the more fall off; | |
Especially since on the outer surface of things | |
Are many minute bodies which can be cast off | |
In the same order in which they were before | |
And keep the shape of the objects, and far more quickly, | |
Since they are so much less able to be impeded | 70 |
Being fewer and placed on the extreme outside. | |
For many things are thrown off lavishly | |
Not only from deep within (as we said before) | |
But from their surfaces, among them colour. | |
Awnings do this, yellow and red and purple | 75 |
Spread over a great theatre, for all to see, | |
On posts and beams, flapping and billowing; | |
For then the great assembly massed below, | |
The scenes on the stage, the grandees in their boxes, | |
They dye, and make to glow and flow with colour. | 80 |
And the more the theatre’s surrounding walls | |
Enclose it, the more all things with beauty filled | |
Laugh when the light of day is thus confined. | |
Therefore, since canvas throws off colour from its surface, | |
All other things must equally send out | 85 |
Thin images from the surface everywhere. | |
And so there are now fixed outlines of shapes | |
Of finest texture which fly all around | |
But individually cannot be seen. | |
Again, the reason why all smell, smoke, heat, | 90 |
And similar things stream out into the air diffused | |
So widely is that they come up from the depths | |
And in their tortuous course are split apart, | |
And there are no straight openings to the paths | |
Of exit, through which they can push out together. | |
But on the other hand, when the thin film | 95 |
Of surface colour is thrown off, there is nothing | |
To tear it up, because it lies exposed | |
And is located on the outer surface. | |
Lastly, whatever similitudes we see | |
In mirrors, water, or any shining surface, | |
Since they possess the same outward appearance | 100 |
As those objects, it follows that they must | |
Consist of images thrown off from them. | |
There are therefore thin shapes and likenesses | |
Of things which singly no one can perceive | 105 |
Yet being flung back by continual | |
And instantaneous recoil produce | |
A vision from the surfaces of mirrors. | |
Nor is there clearly any other way | |
In which they could be presented to reproduce | |
So accurate a likeness of each object. | |
Now I’ll explain to you how very thin | 110 |
Each image is. First since their atoms are | |
So far below our senses and so much | |
Smaller than those things which the eyes begin | |
No longer to see, to confirm this let me explain | |
In a few words how exceedingly minute | |
The primal elements of all things are. | 115 |
First, there exist some animals so small | |
That a third part of them is quite invisible. | |
What do you think one of their guts is like? | |
The ball of the heart? or the eyes? or limbs and joints? | |
How small they are! And what too of the atoms | 120 |
Of which the mind and spirit are composed? | |
Do you not see how fine and minute they are? | |
Consider also things that from their bodies | |
Emit a pungent small—all-heal, rank wormwood, | |
Strong southern-wood, astringent centaury | 125 |
If you press lightly a leaf of one of them | |
Between two fingers | |
[ | |
Rather you may know that many likenesses | |
Of things are flying about in many ways | |
And all beneath the power of our perception. | |
Now these similitudes cast off from objects | |
Are not the only ones that fly around. | 130 |
Others there are which of their own accord | |
Come into being and by themselves are formed | |
In this part of the sky we call the air, | |
Which formed in many ways are carried aloft | |
And melting never cease to change their shapes | 135 |
And form the outlines of things of many kinds. | |
We see clouds quickly massing in the sky | |
That mar the clear face of the firmament | |
Stroking the air as they move. For often giants | |
Appear to fly above, casting deep shadows, | |
Sometimes great mountains and rocks torn off from them | 140 |
Seem to confront the sun and pass across it | |
And then some monster pulling other clouds. | |
Unceasingly they melt and change their shapes | |
And take the outlines of forms of every kind. | |
Now let me tell you how easily and swiftly | |
These images arise, perpetually | |