Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
Driven by unseen blows from them; and they | |
Attack in turn bodies a little larger. | |
The movement thus ascends from primal atoms | |
And comes out gradually up to our senses, | |
And thus it is that those bodies also move | |
That we can see in sunbeams, though the blows | 140 |
That make them do it are invisible. | |
Now, as to the speed with which the atoms move. | |
This in a few words you may understand, | |
Good Memmius, from what I now shall tell you. | |
First, when dawn strews new light across the earth, | |
And the birds flying through the pathless woods | 145 |
In the soft air fill with their liquid notes, | |
So varied and so sweet, the place below, | |
We see then plain and manifest to all | |
How suddenly the rising sun is wont | |
To clothe the world and flood it with his light. | |
But that heat and light serene the sun sends forth | 150 |
Do not pass through empty void; and for this reason | |
They are compelled to go more slowly, and | |
To cleave their way as it were through waves of air. | |
Nor do the particles of heat move separately, | |
But in a mass all linked and massed together, | |
So that at the same time they drag each other back | 155 |
And meet external obstacles, and so move more slowly. | |
But atoms, which are completely solid and single, | |
When they pass through the empty void, and nothing | |
Outside of them delays them, then they move | |
As single units on the course on which they started. | 160 |
Therefore they must be of surpassing speed | |
And move much faster than the light of the sun, | |
And cover a distance many times as great | |
In the time the sun’s flash takes to cross the sky. | |
[ | |
And not to follow every single atom | 165 |
To see in what way everything is done. | |
Some people oppose this, being ignorant of matter, | |
Believing that without the power of gods | |
Nature could never match the needs of men | |
So fitly as she does, so very closely, | |
Changing the seasons and producing crops, | 170 |
And all those other things which pleasure divine, | |
The guide of life, leads mortals to enjoy, | |
And through the arts of Venus coaxes them | |
To breed, and propagate the generations, | |
Lest the human race should perish. But when they imagine | |
That gods have ordered all things for men’s sake, | 175 |
In every way they have fallen far from truth. | |
For even if I had no knowledge of atoms, | |
This from the order of the heavens itself | |
And many other facts I would dare assert— | |
That in no way for us the power of gods | 180 |
Fashioned the world and brought it into being. | |
So great the faults of which it stands possessed. | |
This, Memmius, I will make clear to you later. | |
Now I’ll complete my account of the motion of atoms. | |
This is the place, I think, to make the point | |
That no material thing can by its own power | 185 |
Ever be lifted up, or travel upwards. | |
Do not let the atoms that make flame deceive you. | |
For trees and shining crops spring into birth | |
Upwards and grow and make their increase upwards, | |
Though all weights by themselves tend downwards. | 190 |
And when fires leap up to the roofs of houses | |
And with swift flame devour beams and timbers, | |
We must not think that of their own accord | |
They do this, without some force below to drive them. | |
Blood in the same way, let out from our bodies, | |
Spurts in a jet aloft and splashes gore. | 195 |
Do you not see also the power with which water | |
Spits out beams and timbers? We press them down, | |
Deep down, many of us pushing all together | |
With might and main, and the harder we push them down | |
The more the water wants to spew them up, | |
And throw them back again, so that more than half | |
Emerges and shoots up above the surface. | 200 |
And yet I think we have no doubt that all of them | |
Left to themselves would move downwards through the void. | |
The same thing must happen with flames. These under pressure | |
Can shoot up into the air, although their weights, | |
Left to themselves, must fight to drag them down. | 205 |
And the nocturnal torches of the sky | |
Flying aloft, you see how in their wake | |
Long trails of flame they draw, wherever nature | |
Has set them on their course across the heavens. | |
And see how stars and meteors fall to earth. | |
And the sun also from the height of heaven | 210 |
Throws its heat out and sows the fields with light. | |
So the sun’s heat also inclines towards the earth. | |
Lightning you see through rainstorms flies aslant; | |
Now here, now there, the fires burst through the clouds | |
Headlong together; the flaming bolt falls to the earth. | 215 |
Now here is another thing I want you to understand. | |
While atoms move by their own weight straight down | |
Through the empty void, at quite uncertain times | |
And uncertain places they swerve slightly from their course. | |
You might call it no more than a mere change of motion. | 220 |
If this did not occur, then all of them | |
Would fall like drops of rain down through the void. | |
There would be no collisions, no impacts | |
Of atoms upon atom, so that nature | |
Would never have created anything. | |
If anyone believes that heavier atoms | |
Moving straight down more quickly through the void | 225 |
Can fall on lighter atoms from above | |
And by this means produce the varied impacts | |
That can give rise to generative motions, | |
He is lost, and strays far from the path of truth. | |
For when things fall through water or thin air, | |
They must gain speed according to their weights; | 230 |
For water’s mass and air’s thin nature cannot | |
Slow down the pace of all things equally | |
But must give way more quickly to the heavier. | |
But, by contrast, nowhere at any time | 235 |
Can empty void make resistance to anything, | |
But as its nature demands it must give way. | |
Therefore through the calm and quiet void | |
All things must travel at an equal speed | |
Though with unequal weight. The heavier | 240 |
Will never have the power to fall upon | |
The lighter from above, nor by themselves | |
Beget impacts that make the varied mix | |
Of movements by which nature fashions things. | |
Therefore again and again I say that atoms must | |
Swerve slightly, just the very least—no more— | |
Or we shall find ourselves imagining | |
A sideways movement, which the facts refute. | 245 |
For it is plain and manifest that weights | |
When falling from above, left to themselves, | |
So far as meets the eye cannot move sideways. | |
But whose eye can perceive that nothing swerves | |
Ever so slightly from its straight course down? | 250 |
Again, if movement always is connected, | |
New motions coming from old in order fixed, | |
If atoms never swerve and make beginning | |
Of motions that can break the bonds of fate, | |
And foil the infinite chain of cause and effect, | 255 |
What is the origin of this free will | |
Possessed by living creatures throughout the earth? | |
Whence comes, I say, this will-power wrested from the fates | |
Whereby we each proceed where pleasure leads, | |
Swerving our course at no fixed time or place | |
But where the bidding of our hearts directs? | 260 |
For beyond doubt the power of the will | |
Originates these things and gives them birth | |
And from the will movements flow through the limbs. | |
Consider racehorses. The starting gates | |
Fly open, the horses are strong and keen to go, | |
But can’t break out as fast as their minds would wish. | 265 |
For all the mass of matter must be stirred | |
Through the whole body, roused through every limb, | |
Before it can follow the prompting of the mind. | |
So you may see that heart begins the motion | |
Then mind and will join in and drive it on | |
Until it reaches all the body and limbs. | 270 |