On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) (37 page)

BOOK: On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics)
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For to avoid being captured in the snares of love

 

Is not so difficult as to escape

 

Once in, and break the powerful knots of Venus.

 

And yet, although entangled and ensnared,

 

You can escape this danger unless you stand

1150

In your own way, and overlook the faults

 

In the body and the mind of her you love,

 

For this is what men blinded with desire

 

So often do, attributing to them

 

Virtues with which in truth they are not endowed.

 

So ugly and mis-shapen women are called

1155

Sweet charmers and are held in highest honour.

 

A lover derides another, and urges him

 

To propitiate Venus since his love’s so foul,

 

But cannot see his own disastrous plight.

 

The dark girl is a nut-brown maid, the rank

 

And filthy is a sweet disorder. Is she green-eyed?

1160

Then she’s grey-eyed Athene. Stringy and wooden?

 

Then she’s a gazelle. Is she a dwarf? Why then

 

She’s one of the Graces, the very soul of wit.

 

A giantess? She’s full of dignity.

 

If she stammers, she has a lisp. If dumb, she’s modest.

 

If she’s a fiery hateful chatterbox,

1165

She’s a little squib. If she’s too thin to live,

 

She’s svelte and willowy. If she’s half dead

 

With coughing, then she’s delicate, you see.

 

Is she swollen, with enormous breasts? She’s Ceres

 

Suckling Iacchus. She’s a faun or satyr

 

If she’s snub-nosed. If she’s thick-lipped she’s ‘Kissie’.

 

I will not weary you with all the rest.

1170

But let her have the finest face of all,

 

Let Venus radiate from all her body,

 

Still there are others; still we have lived so far

 

Without this woman; still, as well we know,

 

She does things which the plainest women do.

 

She fumigates herself, poor wretch, with odours

1175

So foul and evil-smelling that her maids

 

Keep well away and laugh behind her back.

 

The lover, shut out, weeping, heaps the threshold

 

With flowers, anoints the proud doorposts with perfumes,

 

And plants his love-sick kisses on the door.

 

But, once admitted, one whiff would promptly make him

1180

Seek some polite excuse to take his leave;

 

His fond complaint, deep-seated, long-rehearsed,

 

Would turn to nothing, he’ld damn his stupid folly

 

In placing her above all mortal women.

 

Our Venuses know this; hence the pains they take

1185

To hide all that goes on behind the scenes

 

From those they wish to hold in chains of love.

 

In vain; for in your mind as clear as day

 

You can see it, and all those other absurdities.

 

And if you like her mind and she’s good-tempered,

 

Why then you in your turn can overlook

1190

And make allowances for human frailty.

 

Not always is a woman feigning love

 

When she sighs and clings to a man in close embrace

 

And body pressed to body, lips to lips,

 

Moistens his mouth with hers to prolong his kisses.

 

Often she does it from the heart, and seeking

1195

Shared mutual delights she rouses him

 

To run with her through all the lists of love.

 

And in no wise could birds and beasts and sheep

 

And mares and cattle to the male submit

 

But that their nature burns for it, and with joy

 

Receives the seed from the covering animal.

1200

Do you not see how pairs whom mutual pleasure

 

Has bound are tortured in their common chains?

 

Dogs at a crossroads often you may see,

 

Wanting to part, pull hard with all their might

 

In different directions, while all the time

 

By the strong couplings of Venus they are held fast.

 

This they would never do unless both felt

1205

Pleasures which lead them astray and hold them bound.

 

Wherefore again and again, I say, the pleasure is mutual.

 

And in the mingling of seed it sometimes happens

 

That the woman by a sudden move overcomes

 

The force of the man and takes control of it;

1210

From the mother’s seed then children like the mother

 

Are born; as from the father’s children like the father.

 

But those you see with figures like to each

 

And faces like both parents’, these have sprung

 

From the father’s body and the mother’s blood

 

When under the goads of Venus through the limbs

1215

The coursing seeds are driven, and dashed together

 

By two hearts breathing as one in mutual passion,

 

And neither masters the other nor is mastered.

 

It sometimes also happens that the children

 

May look like their grandparents or great-grandparents,

 

Since parents in their bodies oft conceal

 

Many first elements mixed in many ways,

1220

And these deriving from ancestral stock

 

Fathers transmit to fathers. From these Venus

 

With varying lot makes shapes and reproduces

 

The look, the voice, the hair of ancestors;

 

Since from a fixed seed all these features come

1225

No less than our faces and our limbs and bodies.

 

And female children spring from fathers’ seed

 

And male are made out of the mother’s substance;

 

For always birth derives from seeds of both.

 

Whichever parent the child most resembles,

1230

Of that it has more than half; which you can see

 

Whether the progeny be male or female.

 

And it is not the power of gods that blocks

 

The generating seed in any man

 

So that no darling children call him father

 

And he drags out his years in barren love,

1235

Which many think, and with much blood in tears

 

Sprinkle the altars, honour them with gifts,

 

To make their wives pregnant with abundant seed.

 

In vain do they importune gods and fates.

 

They are barren, some because the seed’s too thick,

1240

Others because it is too watery and thin.

 

The thin, because it can’t stick in its place,

 

At once runs out and so returns aborted.

 

The thick comes out too closely clotted, and either

 

Cannot fly forward with far-reaching blow,

1245

Or cannot penetrate the place, or else, once in,

 

Does not mix easily with the woman’s seed.

 

For sure love’s harmonies do greatly differ.

 

Some men more easily impregnate some women,

 

Some women more readily receive a man

 

And grow big from him. Many women barren

1250

In earlier marriages have later found

 

A source from which they could bear little children

 

And with sweet progeny enrich themselves.

 

And often men whose fruitful wives have been

 

Unable to bear a child, for these also

 

A woman of matching nature has been found

1255

To fortify their ageing years with children.

 

So much it matters that seeds can with seeds

 

Suited for generation be commingled,

 

Thick meeting watery, watery meeting thick.

 

It matters too what food supports the life,

1260

For some foods make the seeds thicken in the body

 

And others make them thin and waste away.

 

What matters most of all is the position

 

In which the soothing pleasure itself is taken;

 

For in the manner of four-footed beasts,

 

It is generally thought that women best conceive,

1265

Breast down and loins uplifted, so the seeds

 

Can take more easily their proper places.

 

Wives have no need at all of wanton movements.

 

For a woman avoids conception and fights against it,

 

If in delight she holds his penis close

1270

Between her buttocks, and all her body limp,

 

Flows with the waves and sways with every tide.

 

She turns the furrow from its rightful course

 

Under the ploughshare, makes the seed fall wide.

 

Whores do this for their private purposes

 

Lest they be filled too often and lie pregnant,

1275

And to make their loves more pleasing to their men.

 

Clearly our wives can find no use for this.

 

And not from power divine or Venus’ shafts

 

It sometimes happens that a wench is loved,

 

No beauty she; for sometimes she herself

 

By what she does, by person neat and clean,

1280

BOOK: On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics)
6.76Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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