On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) (20 page)

BOOK: On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics)
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Barren of sound and starved of taste they move.

 

Their bodies emit no odour of their own.

845

When you set out to make a pleasing scent

 

From marjoram or myrrh or the sweet flower

 

Of spikenard breathing nectar to our nostrils

 

Among the first things that you need to seek

 

Is an oil that is, so far as you may find one,

850

Odourless and emits no breath of anything.

 

For this will least with harsh taint of its own

 

Corrupt the scents concocted with its substance.

 

For the same reason atoms must not bring

 

An odour of their own in making things,

855

Nor sound, since they can emit nothing from themselves,

 

Nor similarly taste of any kind,

 

Nor cold likewise nor heat nor gentle warmth

 

And all the rest. All these are perishable—

 

The softness of their substance makes them pliant,

 

Its hollowness porous, its brittleness makes them crumble—

860

All must be kept well separate from atoms,

 

If we wish to lay a strong and sure foundation,

 

Immortal, on which the sum of life may rest;

 

Lest you find all things utterly returned to nothing.

 

Now here is another point. Things that we see have feeling

865

Consist of atoms that are devoid of feeling.

 

Nor do things plainly known to us

 

And manifest refute this or fight against it.

 

Rather they take us by the hand and make us believe

 

That living things, as I say, are born from insentient atoms.

870

Why, you can see that living worms emerge

 

From filthy dung when the wet earth is soaked

 

And rotted by unseasonable rains.

 

All other things are seen likewise to change.

 

Rivers and leaves and joyful pastures change

875

Into cattle, and cattle change into our bodies,

 

And often too our bodies build the strength

 

Of wild beasts and winged masters of the air.

 

So nature turns all foods to living bodies

 

And from them makes all the senses of animals

880

In much the same way as she makes dry logs

 

Unfold in flames and turns them into fire.

 

Now do you see how very important is

 

The order in which all the atoms are placed,

 

How they combine, what motions they give and take?

885

What is it then that strikes the mind itself

 

And moves it, and compels it to express

 

Ideas which forbid you to believe

 

That the sentient comes from the insentient?

 

Doubtless it is that a mixture of water and logs

 

And earth cannot produce a vital sense.

890

And here you will please bear this in mind:

 

I do not say that all the substances

 

Which produce sentient bodies always do so.

 

It all depends how small the atoms are

 

That make a sentient thing, what shapes they have,

895

What motions and arrangements and positions.

 

None of these things is found in wood or clods,

 

Yet these, when rotted as it were by rain,

 

Produce small worms, because the bodies of matter,

 

Moved by a new thing from their ancient order,

900

Combine in a way that must make living creatures.

 

Further, those who maintain that sentient things

 

Can be created from things sentient,

 

Themselves from other sentient things created,

 

Make the foundations of our senses perishable,

 

Because they make them soft; for all sensation

 

Is linked with flesh, veins, sinews, all of which

905

Being soft consist of substance which is mortal.

 

However, let us assume, for the sake of argument,

 

That these things last for ever. Then they must

 

Either have the sensation of a part

 

Or else instead be like whole animals.

 

But parts can have no feeling by themselves:

910

Sensation in our limbs involves the whole body.

 

A hand or any part severed from the body

 

Cannot retain sensation on its own.

 

It follows that they are like whole animals.

 

So they must have the same feelings as ourselves

915

So as to share in all our vital senses.

 

How then can they be called first elements

 

And escape the paths of death? They are animate,

 

And animate and mortal are the same.

 

Even if they could, their unions and combinations

920

Would make nothing more than a crowd of living things,

 

Any more than men and cattle and wild beasts

 

By combination could make anything.

 

But if they were to give up from their bodies

 

Their own power of feeling, and acquire another one,

 

What was the point of giving them in the first place

925

What is taken away? Besides, as we saw before,

 

Since we see eggs of birds produce live chicks

 

And worms swarm out when by untimely rains

 

Earth has been rotted, then we may be sure

 

That sense can be produced from the insentient.

930

Suppose, however, someone should maintain

 

That sense can indeed arise from the insentient,

 

But is produced by some process of change

 

Or by some kind of birth that gives it being,

 

It will suffice to prove quite clearly to him

 

That birth does not occur without previous union,

935

And nothing changes except by combination.

 

There can be no sensation in any body

 

Until the living thing itself is born;

 

Because of course its matter is held dispersed

 

In air and rivers and earth and earth-born things,

940

And has not yet assembled, nor combined

 

Within itself the vitalizing motions

 

By which the all-perceiving senses kindled

 

See to the safety of all living things.

 

Consider this also: some living creature

 

Is suddenly prostrated by a blow

 

More powerful than its nature can withstand,

945

And all the senses then of mind and body

 

Are stunned, and thrown at once into confusion.

 

For all the arrangements of the primal atoms

 

Are broken up, the vital motions checked

 

Deep down inside, until the substance fails,

 

Battered through every limb, and loosens all

 

The vital knots that bind the soul to body

950

And scatters it, forced out through every pore.

 

What else are we to think a blow can do

 

Than shatter what it strikes and break it up?

 

And often, when a blow strikes with less force,

 

The vital motions that remain will win,

955

Yes, win, and calm its vast disturbances,

 

Recalling every part to its own course

 

And shattering the impetus of death

 

Now all but lord and master of the body,

 

Kindling once more sensations almost lost.

 

How else could creatures at the door of death

960

Return to life, their minds restored again,

 

Rather than make their exit by a route

 

They have travelled almost to the end, and pass away?

 

Pain occurs when particles of matter

 

Attacked by some force in the limbs and flesh

 

Quiver and tremble in their deep abodes;

965

And when they settle back into their places

 

That is a soothing joy. So you may know

 

That atoms cannot suffer any pain

 

Nor in themselves experience any pleasure,

 

Since they possess no primal particles

 

From whose new movements they might feel distress

970

Or reap some fruit of life-giving delight.

 

Therefore they cannot be endowed with senses.

 

And if, to enable animals to feel,

 

We must attribute senses to their atoms,

 

What are we then to say about those atoms

 

Which give the human race its character?

975

Doubtless they shake their sides and rock with laughter

 

And weeping oft bedew their cheeks with tears,

 

Engage in long and brilliant disputation

 

About the mix of things that makes the world,

 

And then proceed to enquire about themselves

 

To find what atoms they themselves are made of.

 

For if they resemble complete mortal men,

980

They must also consist of other particles

 

And those in turn of others, and then others;

 

There’s nowhere you could dare to call a halt.

 

BOOK: On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics)
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