Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
He believes that the senses truly perceive fire, | |
But not the rest of things that are no less clear, | |
Which seems to me both futile and insane. | |
For what shall we appeal to? What can there be more certain | |
Than the senses to distinguish false from true? | |
And why should one remove everything else | 700 |
And leave only fire, rather than deny | |
That fire exists and leave some other thing? | |
Both propositions seem equally insane. | |
Those therefore who have thought that fire | 705 |
Is the substance of things, and that the universe | |
Can consist of fire, and those who have maintained | |
That air is the principle for the growth of things, | |
Or that water forms things by itself alone, | |
Or earth makes all things and changes into them, | 710 |
These men have clearly strayed far from the truth. | |
Add those who make the elements twofold | |
Combining air with fire and earth with water, | |
And those who take the view that everything | |
Can grow from four—fire, water, air, and earth. | 715 |
Foremost among these is Empedocles | |
Of Acragas, whom that great island bore | |
In its three-cornered coasts, around which flows | |
The Ionian deep with many a twisting firth | |
And splashes salt spray from its green grey waves. | |
Here by a narrow strait the racing sea | 720 |
Severs its coastline from the Italian shore; | |
Here ruinous Charybdis seethes, and here | |
Etna’s deep murmurs threaten once again | |
To muster flaming wrath, so that once more | |
Its violence may vomit bursting fires, | |
Once more dark lightning flashes to the sky. | 725 |
But though this mighty isle seems wonderful | |
In many ways to nations of mankind, | |
Known as a land to see, rich in good things, | |
And guarded by a mighty force of men, | |
Yet nothing, as I think, more glorious | |
Has it possessed than this man, nor more holy, | |
More wonderful, more precious. From his heart | 730 |
Divine, songs ring out clear, and tell the world | |
Of his illustrious discoveries, | |
So that he seems scarce born of human stock. | |
Yet he, and those of whom I spoke before, | |
So much inferior, so much less than he, | 735 |
Though much they found out excellent and divine | |
And from their hearts’ deep sanctuary gave forth | |
Answers more holy, on surer reason based, | |
Than those the Delphic prophetess pronounced | |
Amid the laurels of Apollo’s tripod, | |
Yet these about the origin of things | |
Have crashed: great men, and great there was their fall. | 740 |
Their first mistake is this: that they assume | |
Movement exists though void has been removed, | |
And allow things to be soft and rarefied— | |
Air, sun, earth, rain, and animals and crops— | |
While not admixing void within their bodies. | 745 |
The second, that they acknowledge no limit at all | |
To the splitting of things, nor respite to their breaking, | |
Nor any least of things, the primal atoms; | |
Though we see that all things have an ultimate point | |
Which is the smallest thing our eyes can grasp, | 750 |
From which you may deduce that invisible things | |
Have also an ultimate point which is the smallest. | |
Moreover, these first elements of theirs | |
Are soft: things that we see have birth, and bodies | |
Of wholly mortal nature; so by now | 755 |
The universe must have returned to nothing, | |
And all things been reborn anew from nothing. | |
That both these views are false you know already. | |
Then too, these elements in many ways | |
Are hostile and pure poison to each other; | |
So when they meet, then either they will perish | 760 |
Or fly apart, as we see lightning flashes | |
And thunderstorms and winds all fly apart | |
When they have been driven together by a storm. | |
And then again, if all things were created | |
Out of four things, and resolved back into them, | |
Why should we call them elements of things | 765 |
Rather than, thinking in reverse, maintain | |
That other things are elements of them? | |
For they are born from each other, and change colour | |
And their whole natures among themselves for ever. | |
But if you think that fire and earth and wind, | 770 |
The breezes of the sky, the dew that lies, | |
Can so combine that in their combination | |
Their natures are not changed, then clearly nothing | |
Could be created from them, no animal | |
Nor anything inanimate, like a tree. | |
For in the mingling of this diverse mass | 775 |
Each element in its own nature will display: | |
Air will then be seen mixed up with earth | |
And fire persisting side by side with moisture. | |
But primal atoms in begetting things | |
Must bring a nature secret and unseen, | |
That nothing may stand out to bar and thwart | 780 |
Each thing that’s made from being its proper self. | |
Indeed these men trace all things back to heaven | |
And heaven’s fires, and hold that fire first turns | |
Itself into breezes of the air, that rain | |
Is generated thence, and earth from rain | |
Created, then all things return again | 785 |
From earth, reversing order, moisture first | |
Next air, then heat, and these things never cease | |
Their mutual changes, moving from the sky | |
To earth, from earth back to the stars of heaven. | |
This primal atoms never ought to do. | |
For something must survive unchangeable | 790 |
Lest all things utterly return to nothing. | |
For all things have their boundaries fixed and sure; | |
Transgress them, and death follows instantly. | |
Therefore since those things we mentioned earlier | |
Undergo change, then they must needs consist | 795 |
Of other things that cannot change at all, | |
Of you will find all things return to nothing. | |
Why not rather assume that atoms exist | |
Of such a nature that if they have produced fire | |
Then with a few more added or taken away | 800 |
And motions and positions changed, they make air, | |
And in this way things change from one to another? | |
‘But’, you will say, ‘the plain facts clearly show | |
That from the earth into the winds of air | |
All things grow, and from earth all take their food. | |
And unless the season with propitious hour | 805 |
Makes way for rain and trees reel as storm clouds break, | |
And sunshine cherishes and brings them warmth, | |
Crops, trees, and animals can never grow.’ | |
Yes, and unless we ourselves by solid food | |
And tender juices were sustained, at once | |
Our body would waste away, and all our life | 810 |
From all our bones and sinews be dissolved. | |
For certainly we are ourselves sustained and fed | |
By fixed and certain things; and other things | |
And others again by certain other things. | |
No doubt the reason is that many atoms | |
Common in many ways to many things | 815 |
Are mixed in many things, commingled with them, | |
So different things are fed from different sources. | |
And often it is a matter of great importance | |
How these same atoms combine, in what positions | |
They are held, what motions they give and take. | |
For these same atoms form sky, sea, land, rivers, sun, | 820 |
The same compose crops, trees, and animals, | |
And have different motions, different combinations. | |
Why, in my verses everywhere you see | |
Are many letters common to many words, | |
But yet you must admit that words and lines | 825 |
Differ in meaning and the sounds they make. | |
Such power have letters through mere change of order; | |
But atoms can bring more factors into play | |
To create all things in their variety. | |
Now let us examine Anaxagoras’ | 830 |
Homoeomeria, named so by the Greeks, | |
Which in our language is without a name | |
Because of the poverty of our native tongue. | |
However, it is easy to explain the thing. | |
First, when he talks about homoeomeria, | |
You must understand him to believe that bones | |