Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
For one thing makes another clear; and night | 1115 |
Won’t snatch the path from you until you have seen | |
Right to the heart of nature’s mysteries, | |
So surely things will kindle light for things. | |
A joy it is, when the strong winds of storm | |
Stir up the waters of a mighty sea, | |
To watch from shore the troubles of another. | |
No pleasure this in any man’s distress, | |
But joy to see the ills from which you are spared, | |
And joy to see great armies locked in conflict | 5 |
Across the plains, yourself free from the danger. | |
But nothing sweeter is than this: to dwell | |
In quiet halls and lofty sanctuaries | |
Well fortified by doctrines of the wise, | |
And look thence down on others wandering | |
And seeking all astray the path of life— | 10 |
The clash of intellects, the fight for honours, | |
The lust for wealth, the efforts night and day | |
With toil and sweat to scale the heights of power. | |
O wretched minds of men! O hearts so blind! | |
How dark the life, how great the perils are | 15 |
In which whatever time is given is passed! | |
Do you not see that Nature cries for this, | |
And only this, that pain from out the body | |
Shall be removed away, and mind enjoy | |
Sweet sense of pleasure, freed from care and fear? | |
Therefore we see that human nature’s needs | 20 |
Are small indeed: things that take pain away, | |
And such as simple pleasures can supply. | |
Nature herself demands nothing more sweet, | |
If golden statues of young men be lacking | |
Whose hands hold flaming torches through the house | 25 |
Providing light for nightly revellings, | |
If with no gleam of gold or flash of silver | |
The hall shines bright, if no lyre echoes round | |
High gilded ceilings and fine panelled walls, | |
So long as men, lying in company together | |
On the soft grass beside a flowing stream | 30 |
Beneath a tall tree’s shade, at little cost | |
Find pleasure for their bodies; most of all | |
When weather smiles and the season of the year | |
Scatters the meadows and green lanes with flowers. | |
And fevers leave the body no more swiftly, | |
If figured tapestries and purple sheets | 35 |
Are what you toss on, than if you have to lie | |
With plain plebeian blanket on your bed. | |
Wherefore, since our bodies profit nothing | |
From riches or noble birth or glory of kingdom, | |
We must believe our minds also gain nothing. | |
Unless perchance the sight of mimic war | 40 |
When your fine legions throng the great Parade | |
Strong in auxiliaries and cavalry, | |
Alike in arms, alike with ardour fired, | |
Or when you see the fleet come surging out | |
And spreading far and wide across the sea, | |
These things excite and thrill your mind, and drive | |
Religion’s dread away, and fears of death | 45 |
Leave your heart empty then, from care set free. | |
But if we see that all this is ludicrous, | |
And that in truth men’s cares and haunting fears | |
Reck nothing of clash of arms or brutal missiles | |
And boldly walk with kings and potentates, | 50 |
Nor stand in awe of the bright sheen of gold | |
Or brilliant splendour of a purple robe, | |
How can you doubt that reason has this power, | |
Reason alone? Our lives in very truth | |
Are but an endless labour in the dark. | |
For we, like children frightened of the dark, | 55 |
Are sometimes frightened in the light—of things | |
No more to be feared than fears that in the dark | |
Distress a child, thinking they may come true. | |
Therefore this terror and darkness of the mind | |
Not by the sun’s rays, nor the bright shafts of day, | 60 |
Must be dispersed, as is most necessary, | |
But by the face of nature and her laws. | |
Come, listen now, and I’ll explain the motions | |
By which the generative bodies of matter | |
Beget the various things and, once begotten, | |
Dissolve them, and by what force they are driven to do this, | |
And what power of movement through the mighty void | 65 |
Is given them. Do you now mark my words. | |
Matter, for sure, is not one solid mass | |
Close packed together. We see that everything | |
Diminishes, and through the long lapse of time | |
We note that all things seem to melt away | |
As years and age withdraw them from our sight. | 70 |
And yet the sum of things stays unimpaired. | |
This is because when particles are shed | |
From a thing they diminish it as they leave it, | |
And then increase the object that they come to. | |
They make the one grow old, the other flourish, | 75 |
But do not linger there. The sum of things | |
Is thus forever renewed, and mortals live | |
By mutual interchange one from another. | |
Some races increase, others fade away, | |
And in short space the breeds of living creatures | |
Change, and like runners pass on the torch of life. | |
Now if you think that atoms can be at rest | 80 |
And can by resting beget new movements in things, | |
You are lost, and wander very far from truth. | |
For since the atoms wander through the void, | |
All must be driven either by their own weight | |
Or by some chance blow from another atom. | 85 |
For often when, as they move, they meet and clash, | |
They leap apart at once in different directions. | |
No wonder, since they are extremely hard | |
And solid, and there is nothing behind to stop them. | |
To see more clearly that all particles of matter | |
Are constantly being tossed about, remember | 90 |
That there is no bottom to the universe, | |
That primal atoms have nowhere to rest, | |
Since space is without end or any limit. | |
And I have shown by many words, and proved | |
By surest reasoning that it extends | |
Boundless in all directions everywhere. | |
Since that stands true, no rest, we may be sure, | 95 |
Is given to atoms in the void abyss | |
But rather, as unceasing different | |
Movements impel them, some, colliding, leap | |
Great intervals apart, while others recoil | |
Only a short distance from the impact. | |
And those whose union being more closely packed | 100 |
Leap back short distances after a collision, | |
Being fast entangled by their own complex shapes, | |
These constitute strong roots of stone and the brute bulk | |
Of iron, and other objects of that kind. | |
Of the rest, which wander further through the void, | 105 |
A few leap far apart, and far recoil | |
Over great intervals; these make for us | |
Thin air, and make the shining light of sun. | |
And many wander through the mighty void | |
Rejected from all union with others, | |
Unable anywhere to gain admittance | 110 |
And bring their movements into harmony. | |
An image and similitude of this | |
Is always moving present to our eyes. | |
Consider sunbeams. When the sun’s rays let in | |
Pass through the darkness of a shuttered room, | 115 |
You will see a multitude of tiny bodies | |
All mingling in a multitude of ways | |
Inside the sunbeam, moving in the void, | |
Seeming to be engaged in endless strife, | |
Battle, and warfare, troop attacking troop, | |
And never a respite, harried constantly, | |
With meetings and with partings everywhere. | 120 |
From this you can imagine what it is | |
For atoms to be tossed perpetually | |
In endless motion through the mighty void. | |
To some extent a small thing may afford | |
An image of great things, a footprint of a concept. | |
A further reason why you should give your mind | 125 |
To bodies you see dancing in a sunbeam | |
Is that their dancing shows that within matter | |
Secret and hidden motions also lie. | |
For many you will see are struck by blows | |
Unseen, and changing course are driven back | 130 |
Reversed on all sides, here, there, everywhere. | |
These wandering movements, you may be sure, are caused | |
In every case by atoms. Atoms first | |
Move of themselves, next bodies that are formed | |
In a small group and nearest to the force | 135 |
Of the primal atoms are set moving by them, | |