Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
But let’s suppose another man has struck us | |
A violent blow—he’s hit us really hard— | |
And we move forward. That’s quite different. | |
For all the matter then of all the body | |
Clearly against our will is forced to move, | 275 |
Until the will has reined limbs back again. | |
Do you see the point? Though many men are driven | |
By an external force, compelled to move | |
Often in headlong rush against their will, | |
Yet in our breasts there’s something that has the power | |
To fight against this force and to resist it. | 280 |
At its command at times the mass of matter | |
Is forced to change direction in our limbs, | |
Or, reined back on its way, it comes to rest. | |
The same thing therefore we must admit in atoms: | |
That in addition to their weights and impacts | 285 |
There is another separate cause of motion, | |
From which we get this innate power of ours, | |
Since nothing ever can be produced from nothing. | |
For it is weight that prevents all things being caused | |
Simply by external impacts of other atoms. | |
But that within the mind there’s no necessity | 290 |
Controlling all its actions, all its movements, | |
Enslaving it and forcing it to suffer— | |
That the minute swerving of atoms causes | |
In neither place nor time determinate. | |
The mass of matter in the universe | |
Was never more tightly packed than it is now, | |
Nor ever set at wider intervals. | 295 |
Nothing increases it or is taken away from it. | |
Therefore the motions in which the primal atoms | |
Are now have been the same for ages past, | |
And in like manner they will move hereafter. | |
And things which the ancient custom of the world | |
Has brought to birth will always in like manner | 300 |
Be brought to birth, and be and grow and flourish, | |
So far as to each is given by Nature’s laws. | |
No power can ever change the sum of things. | |
No place exists to which any kind of matter | |
Could escape from the universe, nor any place | 305 |
From out of which some new force building up | |
Could break into the universe, and change | |
The nature of all things, and reverse their movements. | |
And here’s a thing that need cause no surprise: | |
That though all atoms are in ceaseless motion | |
Their total seems to stand in total rest, | 310 |
Except so far as individual objects | |
Make movements by the movements of their bodies. | |
For all the nature of the primal atoms | |
Lies hidden far beneath our senses; therefore since | |
You cannot see them, you cannot see their movements. | |
Indeed things we can see, if some great distance | 315 |
Divides them from us, oft conceal their movements. | |
You see sheep on a hillside creeping forward | |
Cropping the fresh green grass new-pearled with dew | |
Where pastures new invite and tempt them on, | |
And fat lambs play and butt and frisk around. | 320 |
We see all this confused and blurred by distance, | |
A white patch standing still amid the green. | |
And when in mimic war the mighty legions | |
Fill all the plain with movements far and wide, | |
And sheen of armour rises to the sky; | 325 |
Earth flashes with bronze; the tramp of marching feet | |
Resounds on high; the hills struck by the noise | |
Throw back the echoes to the stars of heaven; | |
And wheeling horsemen gallop, and suddenly | |
Charge, and shake all the plain with their attack— | 330 |
And yet among high mountains there’s a place | |
From which they seem to stand still, motionless, | |
A flash of brightness on the plain below. | |
Now let us consider the qualities of atoms, | |
The extent to which they differ in their shapes | |
And all the rich variety of their figures. | 335 |
Not that there are not many of the same shape, | |
But all by no means are identical. | |
Nor is this strange. For since their multitude | |
As I have shown has neither sum nor end, | |
Not all, for sure, must be the same in build | 340 |
As all the rest, nor marked by the same shape. | |
Consider the race of men, and silent shoals | |
Of scaly fish, fat cattle, and wild beasts, | |
And all the varied birds that throng the waters | |
By joyful lakes and streams and river banks, | 345 |
And flock and fly among the pathless woods. | |
Take any one you will among its kind, | |
And you will find they all have different shapes. | |
This is the only way the young can know | |
Their mothers, and the mothers know their young. | 350 |
And this we see they do; no less than men | |
They recognize each other readily. | |
For oft in front of noble shrines of gods | |
A calf falls slain beside the incensed altars, | |
A stream of hot blood gushing from its breast. | |
The mother wandering through the leafy glens | 355 |
Bereaved seeks on the ground the cloven footprints. | |
With questing eyes she seeks if anywhere | |
Her lost child may be seen; she stands, and fills with moaning | |
The woodland glades; she comes back to the byre | |
Time and again in yearning for her calf. | 360 |
Nor tender willows nor meadows lush with dew | |
Nor those sweet rivers brimming to their banks | |
Can charm her mind or ease the sudden care, | |
Nor sight of other calves in happy pastures | |
Divert her mind and lift the care away, | |
So does she seek what was her own, her darling, | 365 |
So steadfastly the child she knows so well. | |
And tender kids with trembling voices know | |
Their horned mothers well, and playful lambs | |
The bleating ewes. So each as Nature bids | |
To its own udder scampers back for milk. | |
Lastly, consider corn of any kind. | 370 |
Not every grain you’ll find is quite the same, | |
But through their shapes there runs some difference. | |
So likewise all the various shells we see | |
Painting the lap of earth, the curving shore | 375 |
Where waves beat softly on the thirsty sands. | |
Therefore again and yet again I say | |
That in the same way it must be that atoms, | |
Since they exist by nature and are not made by hand | |
To the fixed pattern of a single atom, | |
Must, some of them, be different in their shapes. | 380 |
With this in mind it is easy to explain | |
Why the fire of lightning penetrates much further | |
Than our fire does which springs from earthly torches. | |
For you could say that the heavenly fire of lightning | |
Is finer, being composed of smaller shapes | |
And therefore passes through apertures impassable | 385 |
By our fire sprung from wood and lit by torch. | |
Besides, light passes through a pane of horn, but rain | |
Is thrown off. Why? Because the atoms of light | |
Are smaller than those that make life-giving water. | 390 |
And though we see wine pass quickly through a strainer, | |
Yet olive oil by contrast lags and lingers; | |
No doubt, either because its atoms are larger | |
Or they are more hooked and more closely interwoven, | |
And therefore cannot separate so quickly | 395 |
And trickle through the holes each one by one. | |
And here’s another thing. Honey and milk | |
Rolled in the mouth have a delightful taste; | |
But bitter wormwood and harsh centaury | 400 |
Quite screw the face up with their loathsome flavour. | |
So you can easily see that smooth round atoms | |
Make up things which give pleasure to our senses, | |
But, by contrast, things that seem harsh and bitter | |
Are more composed of atoms that are hooked, | 405 |
Which therefore tear their way into our senses, | |
And entering break the surface of our bodies. | |
There is conflict between those things that strike the senses | |
As good or bad, because their shapes are different. | |
The strident rasping of a screeching saw | |
You must not think consists of elements | |
As smooth as melodies musicians shape | |
Waking the tuneful lyre with nimble fingers. | |
Nor must you think that atoms of the same shape | |
Enter men’s nostrils when foul corpses burn | 415 |