Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
In vain, since nature scared away their growth, | |
Nor could they reach the longed-for flower of age, | |
Nor find food nor be joined in acts of Venus. | |
For any things we see must needs combine | |
Before by procreation living beings | 850 |
Can hammer out the pattern of their kind. | |
First they need food, then the life-bringing seed | |
From limbs lying limp must find a way to flow; | |
And male and female cannot join together | |
Unless they have means to make their shared delights. | |
In those days many breeds of animals | 855 |
Must have died out, unable by procreation | |
To hammer out a chain of progeny. | |
All those that you see drawing the breath of life | |
Either by guile or courage or by speed | |
From the beginning of time have been preserved. | |
And there are many which their usefulness | 860 |
Has commended to us, entrusted to our protection. | |
Courage has kept the savage lion safe, | |
Cunning the fox and speed the fleeing stag. | |
The dog, our faithful watchman of the night, | |
And beasts of burden of all kinds, and sheep | 865 |
With woolly fleeces also, and horned cattle, | |
All these have man’s protection, Memmius. | |
Gladly they fled the beasts of prey and sought | |
Peace and good victuals without labour won | |
Which we supply them in reward for service. | 870 |
But those on which nature no such qualities | |
Bestowed, no means to fend for themselves, no use | |
That might persuade us to give them sustenance | |
To live in safety under our protection, | |
All these to prey or profit victims lay, | 875 |
Bound by the shackles of their destiny | |
Till nature brought destruction to their kind. | |
Centaurs never existed, nor at any time | |
Can there be creatures of a double nature | |
Composed of alien limbs and twofold body | 880 |
Such that the two parts live in balance together. | |
And here is proof the dullest brain can grasp. | |
First, the horse reaches its vigorous prime | |
At about three years; by no means so the boy. | |
For even at that age oft he will in sleep | |
Seek the soft comfort of his mother’s breasts. | 885 |
And later, when the horse’s strong limbs fail | |
Wearied by age, and faint as life recedes, | |
Then long-delayed the flower of boyhood comes, | |
And youth begins, and clothes his cheeks with down. | |
Think not therefore that Centaurs can be formed | 890 |
From seed of man and horse that bears the rider, | |
Or Scyllas, half-fish, girt with rabid dogs, | |
And all the other monsters of that kind | |
Composed of members incompatible; | |
Which neither reach their flower and prime of life | 895 |
Together, nor fail as old age weakens them, | |
Nor burn with Venus equally, nor join | |
In the same habits, nor the same pleasures feel. | |
In fact you may see that often bearded goats | |
Grow fat on hemlock which to man is poison. | 900 |
Again, since fire burns lions’ tawny bodies | |
No less than all things made of flesh and blood, | |
How could the Chimaera, three bodies joined in one, | |
Lion in front, serpent behind, goat in the middle, | 905 |
Belch from its body blasts of burning flame? | |
Wherefore, if anyone pretends that beasts | |
Of such a kind could have been brought to birth | |
And made, when earth was young and heaven new, | |
Relying on that empty concept ‘new’, | |
Let him continue with his nonsense, | 910 |
Let him believe that rivers ran with gold, | |
That trees bore jewels for blossom, that a man | |
Was born with such a mighty stretch of limbs | |
That he could set his stride across the sea | |
And turn the whole sky round him with his hands. | 915 |
Though many seeds of things were in the soil | |
At the time when earth first brought forth animals, | |
That is no proof that beasts of compound form | |
Could have been made, from alien bodies joined. | |
Things which now spring abundantly from earth, | 920 |
All breeds of plants, and crops, and smiling woodlands | |
Cannot be interbred and woven together, | |
But each proceeds on its appointed way | |
And by fixed laws of nature stays distinct. | |
And in those days the men that roamed the earth | 925 |
Were hardier by far, as was most fitting, | |
Since hard earth made them. Larger bones they had | |
And solider, with stronger sinews fitted; | |
And neither heat nor cold could readily | |
Subdue them, nor strange food, nor ills of body. | 930 |
Through many lustres of the circling sun | |
They led their lives, wide-wandering like wild beasts. | |
No sturdy arm then steered the curving plough, | |
No one knew how to work the fields with iron, | |
Or to set cuttings into the soil, or use | 935 |
The hook to cut dead branches from the trees. | |
What sun and rain had given them, what earth | |
Created for them of her own accord, | |
That was a gift enough to bring content. | |
Mostly amid the oaks they stayed their hunger | |
With acorns; and the berries which now you see | 940 |
In winter on arbutus ripening red | |
Earth then bore larger and more plentiful. | |
And many other foods young flowering earth | |
Then bore for them, hard foods, but food enough | |
To meet poor mortals’ needs. | |
Rivers and springs called them to quench their thirst, | 945 |
As now in the high hills the waterfalls | |
Call from afar the thirsting tribes of beasts. | |
They made their homes amid the woodland realms | |
Of nymphs, known to them in their wanderings, | |
Where well they knew the living waters still | |
Washed the wet rocks in their abundant flow, | 950 |
Wet rocks, and dripped down o’er the verdant moss, | |
Or bubbling up broke out across the plain. | |
Nor yet they knew how to work things with fire | |
Nor skins for clothes, the spoils of animals, | |
But woods and forests and the mountain caves | 955 |
They made their homes, and hid their uncouth limbs | |
Beneath the bushes, when they must needs | |
Seek shelter from the lash of wind and rain. | |
They could not look to any common good | |
Nor guide their lives by custom or by law. | |
What nature gave a man for prey, he kept, | 960 |
Taught that his own will gave him strength to live. | |
And Venus coupled lovers in the woods; | |
Mutual desire attracted them, or else | |
The strength of man and overpowering lust | |
Forced her, or else he won her by a bribe | |
Of acorns or arbutus or choice pears. | 965 |
And with their marvellous powers of hand and foot | |
They hunted the beasts that roamed the woods and plains, | |
With stones for missiles or with heavy clubs. | |
Many they killed; from few they hid themselves. | |
When night came o’er them, naked on the ground | 970 |
Like bristling hogs they laid their woodland limbs | |
And made a coverlet of leaves and branches. | |
Nor, wandering frightened in the shades of night, | |
Sought they with wailing loud the sun and day, | |
But buried in sleep they waited quietly | 975 |
Until the sun with rosy torch again | |
Spread his new morning light across the sky. | |
For since from childhood always to their sight | |
Darkness and light returned alternately, | |
This brought no wonder to their minds, no cause | |
To tremble lest the earth be held in night | 980 |
Perpetual, the sun’s bright light withdrawn. | |
Much more they worried that the hours of rest | |
Brought danger from marauding animals. | |
Driven from home, they fled their rocky shelters | |
At the approach of foaming boar, or lion, | 985 |
And at dead of night they’ld yield their leaf-strewn beds | |
In terror to their savage visitors. | |
Nor did poor mortals much more then than now | |
Leave the sweet light of life with sad lament. | |
More often then one single man might die | 990 |
Caught by wild beasts and torn, devoured alive, | |
Filling the woods and hills with screams, seeing | |
His living flesh buried in a living tomb. | |