Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
No limit to the breaking of things, the atoms of matter | |
Would have been ground so small as ages past | |
Fragmented them, that nothing in due time | |
Could ever have been conceived from them and brought | |
Into the full maturity of life. | 555 |
For we see things can be dissolved more quickly | |
Than reconstructed. Therefore what past years | |
And bygone days of all eternity | |
Had broken up before now, dissolved and shattered, | |
In time remaining could never be made new. | 560 |
But as it is, a certain end is given | |
Of breaking, since we see all things renewed, | |
And fixed times stand for things after their kind | |
In which they can attain the flower of life. | |
And here’s another point. Though atoms of matter | 565 |
Are completely solid, yet we can explain | |
Soft things—air, water, earth, and fire— | |
How they are made and what force works in them, | |
When once we see that void is mixed with things. | |
But on the other hand, if atoms are soft, | 570 |
No explanation can be given how flints | |
And iron, hard things, can be produced; for nature | |
Will utterly lack a base on which to build. | |
Their pure solidity gives them mighty power, | |
And when they form a denser combination | |
Things can be knit together and show great strength. | 575 |
Moreover, if no limit has been set | |
To the breaking-up of bodies, nevertheless | |
You must admit that after infinite time | |
Bodies do survive of every kind of thing, | |
Not yet attacked by any form of danger; | 580 |
But since by definition they are breakable, | |
It is inconsistent to say they could have lasted | |
Through time eternal struck by endless blows. | |
Again, since a limit has been set | |
For the growth of things and for their hold on life, | 585 |
Each after its kind, and since it stands decreed | |
What each by nature can do and cannot, | |
And nothing changes, but all things are constant | |
So much that every kind of bird displays | |
Its own specific markings on its body, | 590 |
They must for sure consist of changeless matter. | |
For if the primal atoms could suffer change, | |
Under some strange compulsion, then no more | |
Would certainty exist of what can be | |
And what cannot, in a word how everything | |
Has finite power and deep-set boundary stone; | 595 |
Nor could so oft the race of men repeat | |
The nature, manners, habits of their parents. | |
To proceed with the argument: in every body | |
There is a point so small that eyes cannot see it. | 600 |
That point is without parts, and is the smallest | |
Thing that can possibly exist. It has never existed | |
Separately by itself, nor ever will, | |
But only as one part of something else; | |
Then other and other like parts in due order | 605 |
In close formation fill the atom up. | |
Since these can have no separate existence, | |
They must needs clings together in one whole | |
From which they can in no way be detached. | |
Atoms therefore are solid single wholes | |
Cohered from smallest parts close packed together, | 610 |
Not compounds formed by gathering of parts, | |
But strong in everlasting singleness. | |
To them nature allows no diminution | |
Nor severance, but keeps them as seeds for things. | |
Besides, unless there is some smallest thing, | 615 |
The tiniest body will consist of infinite parts, | |
Since these can be halved, and their halves halved again, | |
Forever, with no end to the division. | |
So then what difference will there be between | |
The sum of all things and the least of things? | |
There will be none at all. For though the sum of things | 620 |
Will be completely infinite, the smallest bodies | |
Will equally consist of infinite parts. | |
But since true reasoning protests against this, | |
And tells us that the mind cannot believe it, | |
You must admit defeat, and recognize | |
That things exist which have no parts at all, | 625 |
Themselves being smallest. And since these exist | |
You must admit that the atoms they compose | |
Themselves are also solid and everlasting. | |
Lastly, if nature, great creatress, forced | |
All things to resolve into their smallest parts, | |
She would have no power to rebuild anything from them. | 630 |
For partless objects must lack the properties | |
That generative matter needs—the various | |
Connections, weights, blows, concourses, and movements | |
By which all things are made and operate. | |
Therefore those that have thought that the substance of things | 635 |
Is fire, and the universe consists of fire alone, | |
Have fallen far from valid reasoning. | |
Of these the champion, first to open the fray, | |
Is Heraclitus, famed for his dark sayings | |
Among the more empty-headed of the Greeks | |
Rather than those grave minds that seek the truth. | 640 |
For fools admire and love those things they see | |
Hidden in verses turned all upside down, | |
And take for truth what sweetly strokes the ears | |
And comes with sound of phrases fine imbued. | |
For why, I ask, are things so various | 645 |
If they are made of nothing but pure fire? | |
Let fire be denser or more rarefied, | |
So long as the parts do not differ from the whole | |
Nothing would be achieved. | |
The heat would be fiercer with the parts compressed | 650 |
And fainter with them spread out and dispersed. | |
That is all. In such conditions nothing more | |
Could we expect, much less this world of ours, | |
So various, be made from fire more dense or less. | |
There is this also: if they admit that void | 655 |
Is mixed with things, then it is possible | |
For fire to be condensed and rarefied; | |
But since they see so many obstacles, | |
They shrink from leaving pure void in things. | |
Fearing the heights, they lose the path of truth. | |
Nor do they see that, once void is removed, | 660 |
All things must be condensed and everything | |
Become one single body, that cannot throw off | |
Anything from itself in rapid movement, | |
As blazing fire throws off both light and heat. | |
So you may see that fire does not consist | |
Of parts close-packed and all compressed together. | |
But if they think that in some other way | 665 |
Fires can be quenched and have their substance changed, | |
If they insist on this, then all heat totally | |
Will manifestly perish into nothing, | |
And what is then created will come from nothing. | |
For things have limits fixed; if they by change | 670 |
Transgress them, then death follows instantly. | |
Therefore within them something must remain | |
Safe and secure, or you will find all things | |
Return quite into nothing, and from nothing | |
The stock of things reborn and growing strong. | |
So therefore there are certain definite bodies | 675 |
Which keep their nature unchanged, everlasting; | |
These by their comings and goings and changing order | |
Can change their nature and transform themselves. | |
And these atoms are, for sure, not made of fire. | |
For it would make no difference if some | 680 |
Should split off and depart and others be added | |
Or change positions, if nevertheless | |
They all possessed and kept the nature of fire. | |
For everything they made would still be fire. | |
The truth I think is this: there are certain bodies | |
Which by their impacts, movements, order, position, and shapes | 685 |
Produce fire, and which when their order is changed | |
Are changed themselves, and are not like fire, | |
Nor anything else that can send out particles | |
To our senses, and by impact touch our sense of touch. | |
To say moreover that all things are fire, | 690 |
And nothing in this world is real except fire, | |
As this man does, seems utter lunacy. | |
He uses the senses to fight against the senses, | |
And undermines what all belief depends on, | |
By which he knows himself this thing that he calls fire. | 695 |