Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
As when Cilician saffron o’er the stage | |
Is freshly cast, or when a near-by altar | |
Exhales the perfumes of Arabia. | |
And colours too, whose beauty feeds the eye, | |
Cannot be composed of atoms similar | |
To those that prick the pupil and force tears, | 420 |
Or bring through ugliness disgust and loathing. | |
For everything that charms the senses must | |
Contain some smoothness in its primal atoms. | |
But by contrast things that are harsh and painful | |
Are found to have some roughness in their matter. | 425 |
Some atoms are rightly thought to be neither smooth | |
Nor altogether hooked, with curving points, | |
But rather to have angles projecting slightly; | |
These tickle our senses without harming them. | |
Of such kind are wine-lees and piquant endive. | 430 |
And fire with heat and frost with cold have teeth | |
That bite our senses in quite different ways, | |
As touch in each case indicates to us. | |
For touch (by all the holy powers of heaven!), | |
Touch is the body’s sense, whether from outside | 435 |
A thing slips in, or something inside hurts us, | |
Or pleasure comes when something issues forth | |
In procreative acts of Venus, or when some blow | |
Upsets the body’s atoms and we feel | |
Disordered by their ferment—and for proof | 440 |
Hit yourself anywhere with your own hand! | |
So atoms must have widely different shapes | |
Since they can cause such varying sensations. | |
Again, things that seem hard and dense must be | |
Composed much more of atoms hooked together | 445 |
Held tight deep down by branch-like particles. | |
First in this class and in the leading rank | |
Stand diamonds, well used to scorn all blows. | |
Next come stout flints and the hard strength of iron | |
And bronze that fights and shrieks when bolts are shot. | 450 |
But liquids in their fluid composition | |
Must consist more of atoms smooth and round. | |
You can pour poppy seeds as easily as water, | |
The tiny spheres do not hold each other back, | |
And if you knock a heap of them they run | |
Downhill in the same way as water does. | 455 |
And all those things you see that in an instant | |
Disperse, like smoke or clouds or flames, must be, | |
If not composed entirely of smooth round atoms, | |
At least not hampered by a close-knit texture, | |
So they can sting the body and pass through stones | 460 |
Without adhering together. So you can see | |
That all things of this kind that prick the senses | |
Are made of atoms sharp but not enmeshed. | |
And some things too can be both fluid and bitter, | |
Like the salt sea. This should cause no surprise. | 465 |
For, being fluid, it consists of smooth round atoms, | |
And rough ones are mixed with them, thus causing pain. | |
There is no need for them to be hooked together. | |
You must know that they are round as well as rough | |
And so can roll and also hurt the senses. | 470 |
It can be shown that Neptune’s bitter brine | |
Comes from a mixture of atoms, rough with smooth. | |
There is a way to separate them. You can see | |
How the sweet water, when the same is filtered | |
Through many layers of earth, runs separately | |
Into a pit and loses all its saltness. | 475 |
The atoms of nauseous salt are left on top. | |
Since being rough they adhere more to the earth. | |
Now I have explained this I will link a fact | |
Associated with it and gaining credence from it: | |
That atoms have a finite number of shapes. | 480 |
If this were not so, then inevitably | |
Some atoms will have to be of infinite size. | |
Within the small space of a single atom | |
There can be no large variety of shapes. | |
Suppose that atoms consist of three minimal parts, | 485 |
Or make them larger by adding a few more, | |
When you have taken those parts of a single body | |
And turned them top to bottom, changed them right and left, | |
And have worked out in every possible way | |
What shape each order gives to the whole body, | 490 |
Then, if you wish perhaps to vary the shapes, | |
You must add other parts; thence it will follow | |
That if you wish to change the shapes still further | |
The arrangement in like manner will need others. | |
Therefore novelty of shape involves | 495 |
Increase in size. And so you cannot believe | |
That atoms differ infinitely in shape | |
Or you will make some have enormous magnitude, | |
Which I have proved above to be impossible. | |
Were it not so, the Orient’s richest robes | 500 |
And gleaming silks of Meliboean purple | |
Dyed with the hues of shells of Thessaly, | |
And peacocks’ golden breed of laughing beauty, | |
All, put to shame, would pale before new colours. | |
Myrrh’s scent and honey’s taste would be despised, | |
The swan’s sweet song, the high-wrought melodies | 505 |
Of Phoebus’ lyre would vanish, crushed and silent. | |
Always there would be something more excellent. | |
And as we see good things would yield to better, | |
So turning back, they might give way to worse. | |
Things might well come successively more filthy | 510 |
And foul to eyes and ears and mouth and nostrils. | |
Since this does not occur, but things are bound | |
By limits at each extreme, you must admit | |
A limit too for matter’s different forms. | |
The path that leads from fires to icy frosts | 515 |
Also is finite, and the way back is finite. | |
There are heat and cold and middle temperatures | |
Between the two which make the range complete. | |
A finite distance governs their creation, | |
And two points mark the extremes at either end, | 520 |
Where flame scorches the one and frost the other. | |
Now I have explained this I will link a fact | |
Associated with it, and gaining credence from it: | |
That atoms which are made of similar shapes | |
Are infinite in number. Since the variety | 525 |
Of shapes is finite, then of necessity | |
The number of similar shapes must be infinite, | |
Or else the sum of matter would be finite, | |
Which I have proved it not to be, and in my verses | |
Have shown that the universe is held together | |
From infinity by particles of matter | |
In endless chain of impacts everywhere. | 530 |
You can see that certain animals are rarer, | |
And nature grants them less fertility; | |
Yet other climes and places, distant lands, | |
Breed many of that kind, to swell the total. | 535 |
Of quadrupeds among the first we see | |
Snake-handed elephants, where India | |
Lies safe behind a wall of countless thousands, | |
Of ivory, a rampart none can pass. | |
So huge the number is of those great beasts, | |
Of which we see but very few examples. | 540 |
Let me concede this too: let us suppose | |
One thing exists alone, unique from birth, | |
That has no likeness in the whole wide world. | |
Unless there is an infinite supply | |
Of matter to conceive it, give it birth, | 545 |
It would have no chance of ever being created, | |
Still less of growth and further nourishment. | |
Let us assume also that a finite number | |
Of atoms generative of one single thing | |
Exists, dispersed at large through the universe, | |
Then whence, then where, by what force, in what way | |
Shall they combine and meet in that vast sea, | |
That alien turmoil of endless matter? | 550 |
They have no means, I think, of union ever. | |
Observe, when some great flotilla has been wrecked | |
How the sea throws up pieces everywhere, | |
And scatters thwarts, ribs, masts, yards, oars adrift, | |
And every shore along the coast can see | 555 |
Stern-posts a-floating, warning mortal men | |
To shun the snares and violence and guile | |
Of the false faithless sea, and never trust | |
A calm sea’s smiling treacherous blandishments. | |
So, if you once decide that certain atoms | 560 |
Are in number finite, through all time they must be tossed | |
And scattered on conflicting tides of matter, | |