Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
Bulls’ glue joins wood so fast that frequently | |
The grain of planks gapes with a natural fault | 1070 |
Before the bonds of glue can loose their grip. | |
The juices of the vine will mix with water | |
When heavy pitch and light olive oil refuse. | |
The dye of the sea-purple from the shell | |
Combined with wool can never be parted from it, | 1075 |
Not though with Neptune’s mighty flood you labour | |
To make it new, not though the whole wide sea | |
Should wish with all its waves to wash it out. | |
And gold to gold one thing alone can bond, | |
And bronze to bronze only by tin is joined. | |
How many things like this are to be found! | 1080 |
But to what purpose? Ways so roundabout | |
You do not need, nor ways so long; nor I | |
Ought to spend so much labour on this point, | |
But briefly in few words sum up my theme: | |
When things have mutually opposing textures | |
So that the hollows in the one conform | |
To the projections of the other, and | 1085 |
The converse too holds good, then union is most perfect. | |
And some things also may be held in union | |
Linked as it were by hooks and rings; and this | |
It rather seems is what occurs between iron and magnet. | |
Now I’ll explain the nature of diseases, | 1090 |
And the source from which the power of pestilence | |
With sudden onset blasts a storm of death | |
Upon the race of men, and flocks and herds. | |
First, I have shown above that there are atoms | |
Of many things needful to support our life, | |
And, in contrast, many must fly around | 1095 |
That bring disease and death. When these some chance | |
Has massed together, and the atmosphere | |
Has been disordered by them, the air becomes diseased. | |
And all this power of pestilence and plague | |
Either comes in from without, down from above, | |
Like clouds and mists, or often forms and springs | 1100 |
From the earth itself, when damp has made it rot, | |
Struck by unseasonable rains and sun. | |
You can see also that unaccustomed climates | |
And waters make their mark on travellers | |
Far from home and country, because things are so different. | 1105 |
How different the climate of the Britons | |
Must be from Egypt, where the world’s great pole | |
Leans sideways; and how different from Pontus | |
The clime must be of Cadiz, and right on | |
To lands where black men live, burnt black by sun! | |
And as we see four separate climes distinguished | 1110 |
By the four winds and quarters of the heavens, | |
So do the colours and the looks of men | |
Differ most widely, and diseases fall | |
After their kind upon the varying nations. | |
There is the elephant disease which by the Nile | |
Is bred, in middle-Egypt and nowhere else. | 1115 |
In Attica the feet are attacked, and in Achaea | |
The eyes. To other members other places | |
Are hostile, due to the variations of the air. | |
So when an atmosphere that’s alien to us | |
Comes on, and baleful air begins to creep, | 1120 |
Like mist and cloud it spreads, wherever it goes | |
Carrying disorder and compelling change. | |
And when it reaches our region of the sky | |
It corrupts it, making it like itself, and hostile. | |
So therefore this new plague and pestilence | 1125 |
Without warning either falls upon the waters | |
Or else remains suspended in the air, | |
And when the breath of air is mixed with it | |
We must likewise absorb it in our body. | 1130 |
In similar manner the plague often comes | |
To cattle, and a murrain to bleating sheep. | |
Nor does it matter whether we travel abroad | |
To unhealthy places, changing the cloak of sky | |
That covers us, or whether Nature herself | |
Brings an infected atmosphere to us, | 1135 |
Or something else to which we are unaccustomed, | |
Which by its newness has the power to attack. | |
In days of old such manner of disease | |
And tide of death fell on the realms of Cecrops, | |
Laid waste the fields, turned highways into deserts, | |
And drained the city of its citizens. | 1140 |
Deep in the land of Egypt was its source, | |
And traversing a wide expanse of air | |
And swimming plains, it came at length to fall | |
And lie on all the people of Pandion. | |
And then in companies and in battalions | |
They made surrender to disease and death. | |
First were their heads inflamed with burning heat | 1145 |
And the two eyes all glowing red and bloodshot. | |
Then throats turned black inside sweated with blood, | |
And swelling ulcers blocked the voice’s path, | |
And then the tongue, the mind’s interpreter, | |
Weakened by pain oozed blood, and scarce could move, | |
Lying heavy within the mouth and rough to touch. | 1150 |
Next, when disease had passed down through the throat | |
And filled the chest, and poured its flood of ill | |
Right to the victim’s sorrowing heart, why then, | |
Then truly all the barriers of life | |
Collapsed. The breath rolled out a noisome stench | |
Like that of rotting corpses lying unburied; | 1155 |
And all the power of mind and all the body | |
Began to faint, being on death’s very threshold. | |
Constant companion of these intolerable woes | |
Was torment of anxiety, and laments | |
Were mixed with groans as mind and body suffered. | |
And night and day incessant retching shook them | 1160 |
Convulsing limbs and muscles, and exhausting | |
Bodies already wearied by disease. | |
You could not observe the surface of the body | |
To be burning with excessive heat, but rather | |
It gave a warm sensation to the hand, | 1165 |
And at the same time all of it was red | |
With ulcers as if burnt into it, as when | |
The accursed fire spreads out across the limbs. | |
But in their inward parts men burnt to the bones; | |
A flame burnt in the stomach as in a furnace; | |
And there was nothing however light or thin | 1170 |
That could help their bodies, but only wind and cold. | |
Some cast their burning limbs into cold streams, | |
Throwing their bodies naked into the water. | |
Many hurled themselves headlong into wells, their mouths | |
Gaping to reach the water as they fell. | 1175 |
Dry thirst unquenchable, drenching their bodies, | |
Made streams of water no better than a trickle. | |
Nor was there any respite to their pain; | |
Their bodies lay exhausted; medicine | |
Muttered beside the bed in silent fear, | |
As all the while they rolled their staring eyes, | 1180 |
Sleepless, and burning with the fell disease. | |
Then many signs of death began to appear. | |
A mind disquieted with fear and sorrow, | |
A gloomy brow, a furious frenzied face, | |
Ears troubled and full of noises, breath confused | 1185 |
And either panting fast or deep and laboured. | |
The neck all sodden with a shining sweat; | |
A small thin spittle, yellowish and salt, | |
Drawn by hoarse coughing hardly through the throat. | |
Then hands began to twitch and limbs to tremble, | 1190 |
And upwards from the feet by slow degrees | |
Cold crept on. Then at the final hour | |
Nostrils were pinched, the nose drawn to a point, | |
Eyes sunken, temples hollow, cold the skin | |
And hand, mouth grinning, forehead tensed. | 1195 |
No long time after, limbs lay stiff in death. | |
On the eighth shining of the sun did most, | |
Or with the ninth day’s lamp, give up their lives. | |
If a man chanced to escape the ruin of death | |
Yet later from foul ulcers and black flux | 1200 |
From the bowels, a lingering death awaited him. | |
Or else a copious stream of putrid blood | |
With violent headache flowed out through the nostrils, | |
And all his body’s strength flowed into it. | |
And if a man survived this savage flux | 1205 |
Of noisome blood, yet into his limbs and sinews | |
And even the genital parts the plague went on. | |
Some in their grievous fear of death’s dark gates | |
Severed their manly parts to save their lives; | |