Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
Nor yet is this confined to smells and tastes: | |
The look of things also and their various colours | |
Do not all suit the senses in the same way | |
But to some they come much sharper than to others. | |
The cock, that claps the night out with his wings | 710 |
And with clear voice is wont to call the dawn, | |
Before him ravening lions cannot stand | |
Or stare, so instantly flight fills their minds, | |
Doubtless since in the cock’s body certain seeds | |
There are which when sent into the lion’s eyes | 715 |
Dig holes in the pupils and cause stinging pain | |
Which fierce though they may be they cannot endure. | |
And yet these cannot hurt our sight at all, | |
Either because they do not penetrate | |
Or if they do they find a ready exit | |
From the eyes and so do not by lingering | 720 |
Damage the light of the eyes in any part. | |
Now I shall tell you what things move the mind, | |
And whence those things which come into the mind | |
Do come, in a few words I shall explain. | |
First I say this, that images of things | |
Many in many modes wander about | 725 |
In all directions, thin, and easily | |
Unite when they meet in the air, like spiders’ webs | |
Or leaf of gold, of texture much more thin | |
Than those which strike the eyes and provoke vision. | |
For they penetrate the chinks of the body, and stir | 730 |
The thin substance of the mind and provoke sensation. | |
Centaurs and mermaids in this way we see | |
And dogs with many heads like Cerberus, | |
And images of men when after death | |
Their bones lie in the cold embrace of earth. | |
For images of every kind fly everywhere; | 735 |
Some of their own accord form in the air, | |
Some are thrown off from many different things, | |
Others combine together from these shapes. | |
For sure no image of a Centaur came from life | |
Since no such animal did ever exist. | 740 |
But when the images of man and horse | |
Happen to meet, they easily adhere | |
Immediately, as I said before, | |
Because of their subtle nature and thin texture. | |
All things of this kind are made in this way. | |
And since being very light they are so mobile, | 745 |
As I showed before, any one of these fine images | |
By a single touch can easily move the mind, | |
For the mind is thin and marvellously mobile. | |
That these things happen as I say, you may know | |
Quite easily from what I now shall tell you. | |
Since this is like that—what in the mind we see | 750 |
Like what we see with our eyes—it needs must be | |
That both are caused by similar processes. | |
Now therefore since I have shown that I see a lion | |
By means of images which strike the eyes, | |
It is clear that in like way the mind is moved. | |
It sees the lion and everything else by images | 755 |
No less than the eyes, though what it sees is thinner. | |
Nor is there any other reason why, | |
When sleep has laid out the limbs, the mind is awake, | |
Than this, that these same images assail | |
The mind as when we are awake. Indeed | |
We seem to see a man who has left this life | 760 |
And death and earth have mastered him. So great | |
Is the power of nature. All our senses | |
Lie quiet throughout the body and are blocked, | |
Unable to refute the false by the true. | |
And memory faints in sleep, and languishes, | 765 |
And when the mind thinks it sees the man alive | |
It does not dissent, and say that long ago | |
The man was dead and in death’s mighty power. | |
And it is not wonderful that images move | |
And sway their arms and other limbs in rhythm— | |
For the image does seem to do this in our sleep. | 770 |
The fact is that when the first one perishes | |
And a new one is born and takes its place, | |
The former seems to have changed its attitude. | |
All this of course takes place extremely swiftly, | |
So great is the velocity and so great the store | |
Of them, so great the quantity of atoms | |
In any single moment of sensation | 775 |
Always available to keep up the supply. | |
And many are the questions to be asked | |
About these things, and many explanations given | |
If we desire to make the matter clear. | |
The first question is, why is it that the mind, | |
As soon as it fancies something, thinks of it? | 780 |
Is there an image that waits upon our will | |
And as soon as we wish presents itself to us, | |
Of sea or land, as we may choose, or sky? | |
Assemblies of men, processions, banquets, battles, | |
Does nature create them at a word and prepare them for us? | 785 |
And all the while, at the same place and time, | |
Other minds are thinking of quite different things. | |
And what when we see in dreams the images | |
Moving in time and swaying supple limbs, | |
Swinging one supple arm after the other | 790 |
In fluid gestures and repeating the movement | |
Foot meeting foot, as eyes direct? Ah, steeped in art, | |
Well trained the wandering images must be | |
That in the night have learned such games to play! | |
Or will this rather be the reason? that | |
In one instant of time that we perceive and one voice | 795 |
Is uttered, many units of time are there | |
All unperceived, though reason knows of them, | |
And at any moment all these images | |
Are present ready to hand in every place. | |
And because they are thin the mind cannot clearly see | 802 |
Any except those which it strains to perceive; | |
The rest all perish, and only those survive | |
Such as it has prepared itself to see: | |
And it does prepare itself, and hopes to see | 805 |
What follows on each thing; and it does see it. | |
Do you not know that when even our eyes begin | |
To look at thin things they strain and prepare themselves | |
And otherwise we could not clearly see them. | 810 |
And even in things plainly visible | |
You will find that unless you apply your mind to them | |
They might just as well be far removed from you. | |
What wonder is it then, if the mind misses | |
Everything except what it is itself intent on? | 815 |
So from small signs we draw great inferences | |
And lead ourselves into error and delusion. | |
It sometimes happens also that the image | |
Which follows is of a different kind: a woman | |
Seems in our grasp to have become a man. | 820 |
And different shapes and different ages follow. | |
But sleep and oblivion cause us not to wonder. | |
Now here’s a fault you must most keenly avoid, | |
An error from which with great care you must flee: | |
Do not suppose that the clear light of the eyes | 825 |
Was made that we might see our way before us, | |
Or that the ends of thighs and calves were jointed | |
And set on the foundation of the feet | |
To help us with great strides to march along, | |
Or that our arms were fitted to stout shoulders | |
With ministering hands on either side | 830 |
To enable us to do what life requires. | |
Every interpretation of this kind | |
Is quite perverse, turns reason upside down, | |
Since nothing is born in our body that we may use it, | |
But what is born itself creates the use. | 835 |
There was no sight before the eyes were born | |
Or speech of words before the tongue was made, | |
But long before speech is the tongue’s origin, | |
Long before sound was heard our ears were made, | 840 |
And all our limbs existed, as I think, | |
Before their use. It cannot therefore be | |
That they could have grown for the sake of being used. | |
No. But fighting hand to hand in battle, | |
Tearing of limbs and fouling bodies with blood | |
Came long before bright shafts of weapons flew; | 845 |
And nature taught men to avoid a wound | |
Before through art the left arm opposed a shield. | |
And sure to give the wearied body rest | |
Is much more ancient than soft mattresses. | |
Men quenched their thirst long before cups were made. | 850 |