Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
From others, and ignore the evidence | |
Of their own senses, it profits no more now, | |
Nor ever will do, than it did before. | 1135 |
Therefore the kings were killed, and in the dust | |
The ancient majesty of thrones and sceptres proud | |
Lay overthrown. The sovereign head’s great crown | |
Bloodstained beneath the rabble’s trampling feet, | |
All honour lost, bewailed its high estate. | |
For men do eagerly tread underfoot | |
What they have feared too much in former time. | 1140 |
So things fell back to utter dregs and turmoil | |
As every man sought power for himself. | |
Then some men taught them to appoint magistrates | |
With rights established and the rule of law; | |
For mankind worn by a life of violence | 1145 |
And weakened by its feuds, was ready now | |
To yield to rules of law and binding statutes. | |
For men in anger would avenge themselves | |
More savagely than just laws now would suffer; | |
And for this reason a life of violence | |
Was viewed with utter weariness and loathing. | 1150 |
Hence comes the fear of punishment that stains | |
The prizes of life. For violence and wrong | |
Enmesh a man and oft recoil upon him; | |
Nor easily with calm and quiet mind | |
Can he abide who violates the bonds | |
Of peace established for the common good. | 1155 |
Though he should keep it hid from gods and men, | |
Yet he must wonder how his sin can stay | |
Secret for ever, seeing that many men | |
Talking in dreams or raving in disease | |
Are said to have betrayed themselves, and brought | |
Long-hidden crimes into the light of day. | 1160 |
Let us now think why reverence for gods | |
Has spread through mighty nations and filled cities | |
With altars, and established solemn rites, | |
Rites that now flourish in great states and places; | |
Whence even now implanted in men’s hearts | |
Comes that dread awe which over all the world | 1165 |
Raises new temples to the gods, and summons | |
The crowds that throng them on great festal days. | |
These matters are quite easy to explain. | |
The truth is then that in those early days | |
Men in their waking hours and still more in sleep | |
Had visions of gods, conspicuous in beauty, | 1170 |
Of form surpassing and of wondrous stature. | |
These they endowed with senses, since they seemed | |
To move their limbs, and speak proud words, befitting | |
Their splendid beauty and their mighty strength; | |
And they gave them eternal life, because always | 1175 |
The figures were renewed with form unchanged, | |
And they thought indeed that figures of such strength | |
Could hardly be by any force subdued. | |
Therefore they thought them past all measure blest | |
Since none was troubled by the fear of death, | 1180 |
And because also in their dreams they saw | |
These wondrous beings do many miracles | |
All without labour wrought or weariness. | |
And men observed the order of the heavens | |
And seasons of the year on their fixed course | |
Turning, and could not tell the reason why. | 1185 |
Therefore for refuge everything they gave | |
To gods, their nod controlling everything. | |
And in the sky they placed the gods’ abodes | |
Since night and moon are seen to cross the sky, | |
Moon, day, and night, and the stern signs of night, | 1190 |
Night-wandering torches of heaven, flying flames, | |
Clouds, sun, rain, snow, winds, lightnings, hail, | |
And thunderclaps and mighty murmurings. | |
Ah, wretched race of men, that to the gods | |
Ascribe such things, and add fierce bursts of wrath! | 1195 |
What groans they made for themselves, what wounds for us, | |
What tears for generations still to come! | |
It is no piety to show oneself | |
Bowing with veiled head towards a stone, | |
Nor to be seen frequenting every altar, | |
Nor to fall prostrate on the ground, with palms outspread | 1200 |
Before the shrines of gods, nor deluge altars | |
With streams of blood from beasts, vow piled on vow. | |
True piety is for a man to have the power | |
To contemplate the world with quiet mind. | |
When we look upward to the heavenly realms | |
Of the great firmament, and see the sky | |
Bedecked with sparkling stars, and when we think | 1205 |
Of the sure courses of the sun and moon, | |
Then in our hearts already worn with woes | |
A new anxiety lifts up its head, | |
Whether some power beyond all reckoning | |
Hangs over us perchance, of gods, that make | |
The bright stars in their varied courses move. | 1210 |
The doubting mind is racked by ignorance | |
Whether the world had a beginning, whether | |
Some final end is set for it, when all | |
The mighty bastions of the world no longer | |
Can bear the forces of its restless motion, | |
Or whether by power divine forever sure | 1215 |
They glide eternal through the course of ages | |
And scorn the power of time immeasurable. | |
And what man does not quail with fear of gods, | |
With shrinking mind and flesh creeping with terror, | |
When the parched earth struck by a thunderbolt | 1220 |
Trembles, and thunder rolls across the sky. | |
Nations and people tremble and proud kings | |
Shiver, limbs shaken by the fear of gods, | |
Lest for some foul deed or contemptuous word | |
The solemn hour of punishment be near. | 1225 |
And when at sea a mighty wind and storm | |
Sweeps o’er the waters some high admiral | |
With all his legions and his elephants, | |
What vows he makes to gods to send him peace, | |
What prayers for gentle winds and favouring breezes! | 1230 |
In vain, since oft the violent hurricane | |
Drives him no less upon the reefs of death. | |
So true it is that by some hidden power | |
Human affairs are ground to dust, a power | |
That seems to trample on the splendid rods | |
And cruel axes, and hold them in derision. | 1235 |
Then, when the whole world reels beneath their feet, | |
And cities shaken fall or threaten ruin, | |
What wonder if mortal men despise themselves | |
And all the great and wondrous powers relinquish | |
To gods, as governors of all the world? | 1240 |
I now discuss how metals first were found. | |
Copper and iron and gold and heavy silver | |
And serviceable lead, these were discovered | |
When fire upon high mountains had consumed | |
Vast forests, or a bolt from heaven had struck, | |
Or because tribesmen in some forest war | 1245 |
Had fired the woods to scare their enemies, | |
Or because seeing the bounty of the soil | |
They wished to clear fat fields for pasturage, | |
Or else they wished to kill the forest beasts | |
And profit by their spoils, for pits and fire | |
Were found of use for hunting before they learnt | 1250 |
To fence a wood with nets and drive with dogs. | |
Whatever the reason was that flaming heat | |
With hideous roar burnt all the forest down | |
Deep to its roots and baked the earth with fire, | |
Through melted veins into hollows in the earth | 1255 |
Would trickle a stream of silver and of gold | |
And copper and lead, collecting; and when they saw | |
These hardened and glowing with colour on the earth | |
They would pick them up, charmed by their bright smooth beauty, | |
And see that each was formed into a shape | 1260 |
Printed like that of the hollow in the earth. | |
Then the thought came to them that these things melted | |
By heat could run into any shape or form, | |
And into sharpest point or thinnest edge | |
Be drawn by hammering, and so make tools | 1265 |
To cut down woods and rough-hew timber, and plane | |
Smooth planks, and bore and pierce and perforate. | |
And they tried to make these things of gold and silver | |
At first, no less than of bronze so tough and strong— | 1270 |
In vain, since all their strength gave way defeated, | |
Unable to bear so well the heavy labour. | |
Then bronze was valued higher and gold sank low, | |