Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
Its flight, so that it cannot reach the boundary, | |
Or whether it passes straight on unimpeded, | |
Its starting point is not the boundary. | |
And I’ll pursue you further, and I’ll ask, | 980 |
Wherever you may place the furthest shore, | |
What happens to the lance? The upshot is | |
That nowhere in the universe can be | |
A final edge, and no escape be found | |
From the endless possibility of flight. | |
And here’s another thing. If all the space | |
In the universe stood shut in on all sides | 985 |
By fixed and certain boundaries limited, | |
The store of matter everywhere by now | |
By its own solid weight borne down, compressed, | |
Would all have flowed together to the bottom, | |
And nothing could happen under the vault of heaven, | |
No sky at all could be, not light of sun, | |
Since all the sum of matter in a heap | 990 |
Would lie, through ages infinite sunk down. | |
But as it is, no rest for sure is given | |
To primal atoms, since there is no bottom | |
No base at all, on which they can as it were | |
Accumulate and set up their abode. | |
Always in everlasting motion all things move | 995 |
In every part, and from below supplies come in | |
Of matter, summoned from the infinite. | |
Our eyes tell us that one thing bounds another. | |
Air fences in the hills, the mountains air, | |
And land sets bounds to sea, and sea to lands, | 1000 |
But nothing outside it bounds the universe. | |
Therefore there is a vast abyss of space | |
So wide and deep that flashing thunderbolts | |
Can neither in their courses traverse it | |
Though they may fall through endless tracts of time, | |
Nor by their travel make one whit the less | |
The distance still to go. So huge extends | 1005 |
Capacity of space on either side, | |
No bounds at all, no limit anywhere. | |
Further, nature prevents the universe | |
From setting any limit to itself. | |
Body is bounded by void and void by body, | 1010 |
Thus in their interchange the universe | |
Is infinite, or else one of the two, | |
If the other does not bound it, by itself | |
Must stretch away alone illimitable. | |
Since space is infinite, so must matter be. | |
Else neither sea nor land nor the bright realms of heaven | |
Nor race of men nor holy forms of gods | 1015 |
Could stand for one brief fraction of an hour, | |
For matter, its close union all shattered, | |
Would rush dissolving through the mighty void | |
Or rather it could never have grown together | |
So as to form anything, since thus dispersed | |
It could never have been brought to form a union. | 1020 |
For certainly not by design or mind’s keen grasp | |
Did primal atoms place themselves in order, | |
Nor did they make contracts, you may be sure, | |
As to what movements each of them should make. | |
But many primal atoms in many ways | |
Throughout the universe from infinity | |
Have changed positions, clashing among themselves, | 1025 |
Tried every motion, every combination, | |
And so at length they fall into that pattern | |
On which this world of ours has been created. | |
And this preserved through cycles of the years | |
When once set going in appropriate movements | 1030 |
Causes the rivers to refill the sea, | |
The greedy sea, with lavish waters, and earth | |
Warmed by the sun’s caress renews its fruits. | |
And all the race of animals springs up | |
And grows; the gliding fires of ether live. | |
And this they could by no means do, unless | 1035 |
A store of matter from the infinite | |
Could spring, from which in turn in season due | |
All that is lost could be made good again. | |
For just as living creatures lacking food | |
Lose flesh and waste away, so must all things | |
Decay, as soon as matter, for some reason | |
Turned from its course, has ceased to be supplied. | 1040 |
Whatever world atoms have combined to form | |
Blows from outside cannot preserve entire. | |
They can strike it frequently and hold back a part | |
Till others come and keep the whole filled up; | 1045 |
Yet sometimes they must needs rebound, and give | |
The primal atoms space and time for flight | |
To freedom from the union they have created. | |
Wherefore again and yet again I say | |
That atoms in great numbers must come up; | |
Indeed the blows themselves must fall away | 1050 |
Unless the supply of matter is infinite. | |
One thing you must reject from all belief, | |
Good Memmius, is the theory which some hold, | |
That all things press towards the centre of the universe, | |
And that for this reason the world stands fast | |
Without impacts from outside, and that the top | 1055 |
And bottom are not free to move in any direction, | |
Since everything is pressing towards the centre— | |
If you can believe that anything rests upon itself— | |
That all the heavy things below the earth | |
Press upwards and rest upside down upon it, | |
Like images of things reflected in water. | 1060 |
And likewise they contend that animals | |
Wander about head downwards and cannot fall | |
Off from the earth into the sky below | |
Any more than our bodies of themselves can fly | |
Upwards into the regions of the sky; | |
That when they see the sun, the stars of night | 1065 |
Are what we see, and that they share the hours | |
Of the wide heavens alternately with us, | |
And pass nights corresponding to our days. | |
But error has given these false ideas to fools, | |
Embraced by them with reasoning askew. | |
For since the universe is infinite, | 1070 |
There can be no middle. And even if there were, | |
Nothing could stand there, because it is the middle, | |
Rather than fly apart for some different reason. | |
For all the place and space which we call void | |
Through middle, through non-middle, must give way | 1075 |
To things, wherever their movements take them. | |
Nor is there any place where bodies can go | |
And lose their weights, and stand still in the void; | |
Nor can void make resistance to anything | |
But as its nature demands it must give way. | 1080 |
Therefore things cannot by this means be held | |
In combination, mastered by their longing for the middle. | |
Besides, they do not claim that all bodies press | |
Towards the middle, but only those of earth and water, | |
The liquid of the sea and the great waves | 1085 |
That pour down from the mountains, and those things | |
That as it were an earthly frame contains. | |
They tell us by contrast that air’s thin breaths | |
And hot fires are all borne away from the middle; | |
That all the ether twinkles with the stars | |
And the sun’s flame feeds on the sky’s blue pastures | 1090 |
Because fire flying upwards from the middle | |
Gathers together there; and tall trees, they say, | |
Could never bring high branches into leaf | |
If food did not rise upward from the earth. | |
[ | |
But if it were the nature of air and fire | |
To move always upwards, then there is a risk | |
That suddenly the ramparts of the world | |
Would burst asunder and like flying flames | |
Rush headlong scattered through the empty void, | |
And in like manner all the rest would follow, | |
The thundering realms of sky rush down from above, | 1105 |
Earth suddenly withdraw beneath our feet, | |
And the whole world, its atoms all dissolved, | |
Amid the confused ruin of heaven and earth | |
Would vanish through the void of the abyss, | |
And in a moment not one scrap be left | |
But desert space and atoms invisible, | 1110 |
For at whatever point you first allow | |
Matter to fail, there stands the gate of death. | |
And through it all the crowding throng of matter | |
Will make its exit and pass all away. | |
And so, led firmly on, without great toil | |
You will understand these matters well and truly. | |