Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
Are made of very small and tiny bones, | 835 |
And flesh of small and tiny bits of flesh, | |
And blood created out of many drops | |
Of blood combined together, and that gold | |
Can be built up from grains of gold, and earth | |
Grows out of little earths, and fire from fires, | 840 |
Water from water drops, and all the rest | |
He fancies are formed on the same principle. | |
But he does not conclude that void exists, | |
Nor any limit to the division of things. | |
Therefore on both these points he plainly errs | 845 |
Just as those did of whom I spoke before. | |
Add that he makes his elements too frail, | |
If elements they are that are endowed | |
With a nature similar to the things themselves, | |
Suffer like them and perish, nowhere reined back | |
By anything from ruin and destruction. | |
Which of them under huge pressure will endure | 850 |
And escape destruction right in the jaws of death? | |
Will fire or air or water? Which of them? | |
Will blood or bones? Not one, in my belief, | |
But everything alike will in its essence | |
Be as perishable as those things we clearly see | 855 |
Visibly perishing, vanquished by some force. | |
I call to witness what I proved before: | |
That nothing ever can be reduced to nothing | |
Nor anything again grow out of nothing. | |
Again, since food builds up the body and nourishes it, | |
Plainly our veins and blood and bones and sinews | 860 |
Must needs be made of parts unlike themselves. | |
Or if they say that all food is a mixture | |
Incorporating little bits of bones | |
And sinews, yes, and little drops of blood, | |
All food both solid and liquid must be held | |
To be composed of things unlike itself, | 865 |
A mixture of bones and sinews, pus and blood. | |
And all those things that grow out from the earth, | |
If they are in the earth, earth must consist | |
Of things unlike itself that spring from it. | |
Take other cases, and the same words will apply | 870 |
If flame, smoke, ashes lurk unseen in wood | |
It follows that the wood must be composed | |
Of things unlike itself, that rise from it. | |
And here is left some small chance of escape | 875 |
Which Anaxagoras puts to good use. | |
All things, he holds, lie hidden in all things | |
Mixed up with them, but only one is seen, | |
The one that has the most parts in the mixture, | |
Set on the surface, readier to see. | |
But this is very far removed from truth. | 880 |
For then it would be natural that corn | |
Ground by the millstone’s crushing strength would show | |
Some signs of blood or other substances | |
Which find their nourishment within the body; | |
And that, when we rub stone on stone, then blood should trickle, | |
And grass and water likewise should emit | 885 |
Drops sweet and flavoured like the milk of sheep. | |
And often too when clods of earth are crumbled | |
One should see various plants and corn and leaves | |
Lurking in miniature amid the soil. | 890 |
Lastly, when wood is broken one should see | |
That ash and smoke and tiny flames lie hid. | |
But plain facts show that none of this occurs. | |
It follows therefore that one sort of thing | |
Is not mixed with another in this way. | |
No. But seeds common to many things | |
In many ways must needs lie hid inside them. | 895 |
‘But often on great mountains’, you will say, | |
‘It happens that the high tops of tall trees | |
Are rubbed together, forced by strong south winds, | |
Until they blaze in bursting flower of flame.’ | 900 |
Agreed. But fire is not implanted in the wood, | |
But there are many seeds of heat which the friction | |
Concentrates, to make the forest fires. | |
If flame were hiding in forests ready-made, | |
Not for one moment could the fires be hid, | 905 |
But everywhere they’ld burn the woods, turn trees to ashes. | |
Now do you see the point I made before, | |
That 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, | 910 |
And that these same by quite small mutual changes | |
Can make both fires and firs? As the words themselves | |
Consist of elements a little changed | |
When we say fires or firs with different sounds? | |
And if you cannot explain the things you see | 915 |
Without inventing tiny parts of matter | |
Endowed with the same nature as the whole, | |
This reasoning puts an end to all your atoms. | |
They’ll simply shake their sides and rock with laughter, | |
And salt tears run in rivers down their cheeks. | 920 |
Come now, and learn what follows, and listen to it | |
More keenly. I know how dark these matters are. | |
But the high hope of fame has struck my heart | |
Sharply with holy wand and filled my breast | |
With sweet love of the Muses. Thus inspired | |
With mind and purpose flourishing and free | 925 |
A pathless country of the Pierides | |
I traverse, where no foot has ever trod. | |
A joy it is to come to virgin springs | |
And drink, a joy it is to pluck new flowers | |
To make a glorious garland for my head | |
From fields whose blooms the Muses never picked | |
To crown the brows of any man before. | 930 |
First, since of matters high I make my theme, | |
Proceeding to set free the minds of men | |
Bound by the tight knots of religion. | |
Next, since of things so dark in verse so clear | |
I write, and touch all things with the Muses’ charm. | |
In this no lack of purpose may be seen. | 935 |
For as with children, when the doctors try | |
To give them loathsome wormwood, first they smear | |
Sweet yellow honey on the goblet’s rim, | |
That childhood all unheeding may be deceived | |
At the lip’s edge, and so drink up the juice | |
Of bitter medicine, tricked but not betrayed, | 940 |
And by such means gain health and strength again, | |
So now do I: for oft my doctrine seems | |
Distasteful to those that have not sampled it | |
And most shrink back from it. My purpose is | |
With the sweet voices of Pierian song | 945 |
To expound my doctrine, and as it were to touch it | |
With the delicious honey of the Muses; | |
So in this way perchance my poetry | |
Can hold your mind, while you attempt to grasp | |
The nature of the world, and understand | |
The great design and pattern of its making. | 950 |
And now, since I have shown that primal atoms | |
Completely solid unimpaired for ever | |
Fly everywhere around, let us unfold | |
Whether or not there is a limit to their number. | |
Likewise the void which we have found to exist, | |
Or place or space, in which all things occur, | 955 |
Let us see whether its extent is limited | |
Or stretches wide immeasurable and profound. | |
We find then that the universe is not bounded | |
In any direction. If it were, it would need to have | |
An extremity. But nothing can have an extremity | |
Unless there is something outside to limit it, | 960 |
Something beyond to bound it, some clear point | |
Further than which our senses cannot reach. | |
Now since we must admit that there is nothing | |
Beyond the sum of things, it has no extremity. | |
Therefore it has no end, nor any limit. | |
Nor does it matter in what part of it | 965 |
You stand: wherever a man takes his place | |
It stretches always boundless, infinite. | |
Suppose moreover that the whole of space | |
Were finite, if one ran right to the edge, | |
Its farthest shore, and threw a flying lance, | 970 |
Which would you rather say, that hurled amain | |
It flies straight on, as aimed, far far away, | |
Or that something can check it and block its path? | |
One or the other you are bound to choose. | |
But each cuts off your escape route, and compels you | 975 |
To concede that the universe continues without end. | |
For whether there is some object that can thwart | |