Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
Flowing and falling from things and moving away. | 145 |
For there is always something streaming off | |
From the surface of things which they eject. And this, | |
When it meets some things, passes through them, like glass | |
Especially. But when it meets rough stone | |
Or solid wood at once it is broken up, | |
And then it cannot reproduce an image. | |
But when the object opposed is bright and compact | 150 |
As a mirror is, none of these things occurs; | |
For it cannot pass through it, as it does through glass, | |
And also it cannot be broken up, so much | |
Safety the smoothness never forgets to give. | |
That is why the images stream back to us. | |
However suddenly you place a thing | 155 |
In front of a mirror, at once its image appears; | |
So you may know that from the surface of things | |
There is a constant and perpetual flow | |
Of thin shapes and thin tissues everywhere. | |
Therefore in a short time many images | |
Come into being, so you may rightly call | |
The origin of them instantaneous. | 160 |
The sun must send out many beams of light | |
In a short time, to fill the world with it, | |
So in one moment many images | |
Are borne in many ways into all parts. | 165 |
Whichever way we turn a mirror, something | |
Makes answer to us of like form and colour. | |
Consider this now: when the weather has been | |
Most brilliant, suddenly the sky becomes | |
Gloomy and ugly so that you might think | |
That all the dark from Acheron had fled | 170 |
And filled the mighty caverns of the sky. | |
So foul a night of clouds has massed together | |
And the black face of fear lours from on high; | |
And the image of these clouds, how small it is, | |
No man can tell or reasonably describe. | 175 |
I now explain how fast these images move | |
And what velocity as they swim through the air | |
Is given them, a brief hour for a mighty space, | |
Where each with varied impulse makes its course. | |
And this I tell in words both sweet and few. | 180 |
Better the swan’s brief song than that cry of cranes | |
Spread by the south wind through the clouds on high. | |
First, you may very often see that things | |
Light and of minute elements move swiftly. | |
Of such kind are the sun’s light and its heat | 185 |
Because they are made of minute elements | |
Which are hit, at it were, and cross immediately | |
The intervening space hit by a blow that follows: | |
For instantly light follows light, and flash | |
Is triggered off by flash, like a team of oxen. | 190 |
In much the same way therefore the images | |
Must be able to run through space incalculable | |
In a moment of time; first, since a very small impulse | |
From far behind is enough to set them in motion, | |
Since with so swift a lightness they rush on. | |
Next, since their texture is so very fine | 195 |
That they can easily penetrate anything | |
And ooze as it were through the intervening air. | |
Consider this too: certain particles | |
Which rise from deep down, like the sun’s heat and light, | 200 |
Are seen at the very instant of daybreak | |
Through the whole space of heaven to pour themselves | |
And fly over land and sea and flood the sky; | |
What then of those already on the surface | |
When they are thrown off and nothing checks their flight? | 205 |
Faster and further clearly they must go | |
And cover a distance many times as great | |
In the same time that it takes the sun | |
To spread its light abroad across the sky. | |
This also especially seems to show most truly | |
The speed at which these images are borne: | 210 |
A smooth surface of water is exposed | |
To a clear sky at night, at once the stars | |
And constellations of the firmament | |
Shining serene make answer in the water. | |
Now do you see how in an instant the image | |
Falls from the edge of heaven to the edge of earth? | 215 |
Wherefore again and yet again I say | |
How marvellously swift the motion is | |
Of the bodies which strike our eyes and make us see. | |
And odours flow perpetually from things, | |
As cold from rivers, heat from the sun, and spray | |
From the sea which scours the walls along the shore. | 220 |
And always different sounds fly through the air. | |
Again, a damp taste of salt enters our mouths | |
When we walk by the sea; and when we watch wormwood | |
Being mixed with water we sense its bitterness. | |
So does from all things always something flow | 225 |
And everywhere into all parts spreads abroad. | |
And no delay or rest is given this flow | |
Since we constantly feel it, and all things always | |
We can see and smell, and hear the sound of them. | |
Again, a shape that is handled in the dark | 230 |
Is recognized to be the same we see | |
In the clear light of day. It follows then | |
That sight and touch derive from a like cause. | |
If we touch something square and it stimulates | |
Our senses in the dark, what can it be | |
That in the light comes to our sight as square, | 235 |
If not an image of it? | |
Images therefore clearly are the cause | |
Of vision, and without them nothing can be seen. | |
Now these images I speak of are flying around | |
Everywhere and sprayed about in all directions; | 240 |
But since it is only with our eyes we see them | |
It follows that only where we turn our sight | |
There all things strike it with their form and colour. | |
Also the image enables us to see | |
How far away things are, and to distinguish | 245 |
Distances, for when it is sent off | |
At once it drives and pushes all the air | |
That is between the object and our eyes, | |
And this air all passes through our eyeballs | |
And brushes the pupils as it were in going through. | |
This is the reason why we can see how far | 250 |
Away things are, and the greater the volume of air | |
That is driven before it and the longer the stream | |
That brushes our eyes, the more distant | |
And far removed the thing is seen to be. | |
And all this happens extremely rapidly, | |
You may be sure, so that at the same moment | |
We see both what a thing is and how far away. | 255 |
And here is a thing that need not cause surprise— | |
That objects can be perceived though the images | |
That strike our eyes cannot themselves be seen. | |
For when wind blows slowly on us and bitter cold | |
Flows round, we do not feel each particle | 260 |
Of wind or cold, but rather the whole at once, | |
And we feel blows falling upon our body, as if | |
Something were striking it, and giving us the feeling | |
Of its own body coming from outside. | |
And when we knock a stone with a toe, we touch | 265 |
Just the outer surface of it and the surface colour, | |
But we do not feel this by our touch, but rather | |
The hardness of the stone deep down inside. | |
Now I will tell you why the image is seen | |
Beyond the mirror; for certainly it seems | |
To be far withdrawn and lie deeply within. | 270 |
We see things in the same way through open doors | |
When the doorway gives an open view through it | |
And lets us see many things outside the house. | |
This vision is caused by a double stream of air. | |
For first the air this side of the doorposts is seen, | 275 |
Then follow the doorposts themselves both right and left, | |
And then the light outside and the second stream | |
Of light brushes the eyes, and finally | |
The objects which are really seen out of doors. | |
The same thing happens when a mirrored image | |
Projects itself on to our sight: on its way to our eyes | 280 |
It drives and pushes all the air between | |
Itself and our eyes, and makes us feel this first | |
Before we see the mirror. But when we have seen | |
The mirror itself also, at once the image | |
That travels from us to it and is reflected | 285 |
Comes back to our eyes, pushing a stream of air | |