Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
Indeed, I will follow you in your argument | |
And say that whatever speaks and laughs and thinks | |
Must be composed of parts that do the same. | |
But if we see that this is raving madness, | 985 |
That a man can laugh who has no laughing atoms, | |
And think and proffer learned arguments | |
Though sprung from seeds not wise or eloquent, | |
Why should not things we see possessing feeling | |
Be made of seeds entirely without senses? | 990 |
Lastly, we are all sprung from heavenly seed, | |
All from the same one father, him from whom | |
Life-giving mother, kindly earth, receives | |
Sweet showers of moisture, by which fertilized | |
She brings forth shining crops and joyful trees, | |
Brings forth mankind and all the breed of beasts, | 995 |
And yields the food on which all feed their bodies, | |
To lead sweet lives and propagate their kind. | |
Wherefore she rightly has earned the name of mother. | |
And what before was made from earth returns | |
To earth, and what came down from ether’s shores | 1000 |
Borne back again the halls of heaven receive. | |
And death does not destroy things when they die | |
So as to bring destruction to their atoms, | |
But breaks their combination everywhere, | |
And then makes new conjunctions, making all things | |
To change their shapes and colours and receive feeling, | 1005 |
And in an instant yield it up again. | |
So you may recognize how much it matters | |
How these same atoms combine, in what positions, | |
What motions mutually they give and take. | |
Then you will not suppose that what we see | 1010 |
Floating upon the surface of things, sometimes | |
Being brought to life, then dying suddenly, | |
Are qualities of everlasting atoms. | |
Moreover in my verse it matters much | |
How letters are arranged and linked with others. | |
The same denote sky, sea, land, rivers, sun, | 1015 |
The same denote crops, trees, and animals, | |
And, if not all, by far the greater part | |
Are alike; but the position decides the meaning. | |
So with real things, when the combination of their atoms, | |
Their motions, order, forms, shapes, and positions | 1020 |
Are changed, the thing itself must change. | |
Now give your mind, please, to true reasoning. | |
A new thing now is struggling urgently | |
To reach your ears, a new aspect of creation | |
Is striving to reveal itself. | 1025 |
But nothing is so simple that at first | |
It is not more difficult to believe it than to doubt it, | |
And nothing so mighty and so marvellous | |
That men do not in time abate their wonder. | |
Take first the bright pure azure of the sky | 1030 |
And all the sky contains—the wandering stars, | |
The moon, and glorious radiance of the sun— | |
If all these suddenly, unexpectedly, | |
For the first time appeared to mortal men, | |
What would they name more wonderful, what less likely | 1035 |
That men before they saw it should believe it? | |
Nothing, I think—so marvellous the sight. | |
But now, long sated with this glorious vision, | |
Men do not care, and no one lifts his head | |
To look up to the shining realms of heaven. | |
Therefore forbear, dismayed by novelty, | 1040 |
To thrust out reason from your mind. No. Weigh it | |
With judgement keen, and then if it seems true | |
Give in, or if false, gird yourself to fight. | |
For since the sum of space is infinite | |
Spreading beyond the ramparts of the world, | 1045 |
The mind desires by reasoning to find | |
What may exist there far away, the bourne | |
To which the exploring intellect aspires, | |
To which the mind’s thrust flies forever free. | |
This is my first point. Everywhere around us | |
On either side, above, below, throughout the universe, | |
There is no end. I have proved this, and the facts themselves | 1050 |
Shout it aloud. Deep space shines clear to see. | |
Now since space lies in all directions infinite | |
And seeds in number numberless for ever | |
Fly all around in countless different ways | |
Through an unfathomable universe | |
Perpetually driven by everlasting motion, | 1055 |
It must be deemed in high degree unlikely | |
That this earth, this sky, alone have been created, | |
And all those bodies of matter outside do nothing. | |
And added proof of this lies in the fact | |
That nature made this world. The seeds of things | |
In random and spontaneous collision | |
In countless ways clashed, heedless, purposeless, in vain | 1060 |
Until at last such particles combined | |
As suddenly united could become | |
The origins always of mighty things, | |
Of earth, sky, sea, and breeds of living creatures. | |
Wherefore again and again I say you must admit | |
That in other places other combinations | |
Of matter exist such as this world of ours | 1065 |
Which ether holds in ardent fond embrace. | |
And note this too—when matter is abundant | |
And space is there, and nothing checks and hinders, | |
Then action and creation must take place. | |
And if there exists so great a store of atoms | 1070 |
As all the years of life on earth could never number, | |
And if the same great force of nature stands | |
Ready to throw the seeds of things together | |
In the same way as they have here combined, | |
Then of necessity you must accept | |
That other earths exist, in other places, | 1075 |
With varied tribes of men and breeds of beasts. | |
Add to this that nothing in the universe | |
Is born unique and grows unique, alone, | |
But all belong to a species, very many | |
Of the same kind. Consider animals: | 1080 |
You’ll find this rule applies to the wild beasts | |
That roam the mountains, to the human race, | |
To the dumb shoals of fish, to all things that fly. | |
Therefore likewise one must accept that sky | |
And earth and sun, moon, sea, and all else that exists | 1085 |
Are not unique, but in number numberless. | |
No less a deep-set boundary stone of life | |
Awaits them, no less from a birth their bodies sprang, | |
Than those that here on earth of every kind | |
Abound, and multiply their generations. | |
If you know these things well, you’ll see at once | 1090 |
That nature is free, no slave to masters proud; | |
That nature by herself all things performs | |
By her own will without the aid of gods. | |
For—by the gods who in their tranquil peace | |
Live ever quiet in a life serene— | |
Who has the strength to rule the sum of things | |
Immeasurable, to hold beneath his hands | 1095 |
Bridled and reined the unfathomable deep, | |
To turn the firmaments of all the heavens, | |
Warm all the fertile worlds with heavenly fires, | |
At all times present and in every place, | |
That can make darkness with his clouds, and shake | |
The sky serene with thunder, and with lightning | 1100 |
Oft shatter his own temples and then departing | |
Let fly at deserts, raging with that bolt | |
That often spares the guilty, but brings death | |
To men whose lives are innocent and blameless? | |
Since the first natal hour of the world, | 1105 |
The day when earth and sea were born, and sun | |
Had first its rising, atoms have been added | |
In multitudes from outside, many seeds | |
Added from out the mighty universe, | |
Thrown all together by its ceaseless motion; | |
That increase might be given to land and sea, | |
The realms of sky extend their bounds, and lift | 1110 |
Their lofty buildings far above the earth; | |
That air might rise. For blows from every side | |
Supply to each thing its own special atoms. | |
All join their own kind; water goes to water, | |
Earth is increased by elements of earth, | |
And fires are forged by fire, and ether by ether, | 1115 |
Until to the utmost limit of their growth | |
Nature at last has brought them, great perfectress, | |
Great mother and creatress of the world. | |