Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
And this is reached when into the veins of life | |
No more is given than passes out away. | |
Here for all things the advance of life must halt, | 1120 |
Here nature checks the increase of her powers. | |
For all things that you see in cheerful growth | |
Scale step by step the ladder of ripe years, | |
Take into themselves more things than they discharge, | |
While food flows smoothly into all the veins | 1125 |
And they themselves are not so loosely knit | |
As to shed matter freely and to squander | |
More than their life absorbs in nourishment. | |
For though we must accept that many bodies | |
Flow off from things and pass away, more must be added, | |
Until they have touched the topmost peak of growth. | 1130 |
Then the strong vigour of maturity | |
Age slowly breaks and melts into decay. | |
And when growth stops, the larger a thing is | |
And wider, the more particles it throws off | |
And scatters them on all sides everywhere. | 1135 |
Food does not easily penetrate the veins, | |
Nor in proportion to the flow outpoured | |
Is there enough to bring to birth again | |
All that is needed, and make good the loss. | |
So death comes rightly, when by constant flow | |
All things are thinned, and all things, struck from without | 1140 |
By an increasing hail of blows, succumb; | |
Since at the end great age finds food to fail, | |
And without ceasing bodies from outside | |
Beating on things subdue them and destroy them. | |
So shall the ramparts of the mighty world | 1145 |
Themselves be stormed and into crumbling ruin | |
Collapse. Even now the world’s great age is broken | 1150 |
And earth worn out scarce bears small animals, | |
She who created all the generations | |
And brought to birth huge bodies of wild beasts. | |
No golden chain, I think, from heaven on high | |
Let down the breeds of mortals to the fields; | |
Nor sea nor waves that break upon the rocks | 1155 |
Created them. From the same earth they sprang | |
That now supplies their nurture from her body. | |
Herself the shining crops and joyful vineyards | |
By her own will first made for mortal men; | |
Herself gave forth sweet fruits and joyful pastures, | |
Which now our toil scarce brings to growth and increase. | 1160 |
We wear out oxen, wear out the strength of farmers, | |
Wear down the ploughshare in fields that scarce can feed us, | |
So do they grudge their fruits and multiply our toil. | |
And now the aged ploughman shakes his head | |
With many a sigh that all the weary labour | |
Of his strong arms has fallen away in vain, | 1165 |
And when he compares times present with times past | |
Oft praises then the fortunes of his father. | |
And looking on his old and worn-out vines, | |
The husbandman bewails the march of time | |
And rails at heaven, and grieves that men of yore | |
In old god-fearing days could easily | 1170 |
Within the confines of a narrow plot, | |
Far smaller then than now, support their lives. | |
He does not know that all things in decay | |
By slow degrees are moving towards their end | |
Worn by the age-old passage of the years. | |
You, who from so great darkness could uplift | |
So clear a light, lighting the joys of life, | |
You, glory of the Greeks, I follow you | |
And in your footprints plant my footsteps firm, | |
Not in desire of rivalry, but love | 5 |
Drives me to yearn to copy you. The swallow | |
Can’t vie with swans. What would a trembling kid | |
Do in contest with a strong swift horse? | |
You, father, have revealed the truth, and you | |
A father’s precepts gave us in your pages. | 10 |
As bees in flowery glades sip every bloom, | |
So we, like them, feed on your golden words, | |
Golden, most worthy of eternal life. | |
For once your reason, born of mind divine, | |
Starts to proclaim the nature of the world | 15 |
The terrors of the mind flee all away, | |
The walls of heaven open, and through the void | |
Immeasurable, the truth of things I see. | |
The gods appear now and their quiet abodes | |
Which no winds ever shake, nor any rain | |
Falls on them from dark clouds, nor ever snow | 20 |
Congealed with bitter frost with its white fall | |
Mars them; but always ever-cloudless air | |
Enfolds and smiles on them with bounteous light. | |
There nature everything supplies, and there | |
Through all the length of ages nothing comes | |
To vex the tranquil tenor of their minds. | |
But in contrast nowhere at all appear | 25 |
The halls of Acheron, though earth no bar | |
Opposes, but lets all be clearly seen | |
That moves beneath our feet throughout the void. | |
And now from all these things delight and joy, | |
As it were divine, takes hold of me, and awe | |
That by your power nature so manifest | |
Lies open and in every part displayed. | 30 |
And since I have taught the beginnings of all things, | |
What kind they are, and how in varying forms | |
Of their own accord, driven by everlasting | |
Motion, they fly, and how all things from them | |
Can be created, next and following this | |
The nature of mind and spirit by my verses | 35 |
Must be made clear, and headlong out of doors | |
That fear of Hell be thrown, which from its depths | |
Disquiets the life of man, suffusing all | |
With the blackness of death, and leaving no delights | |
Pure and unsullied. This man it persuades | 40 |
To break the bonds of friendship and another | 83 |
To violate honour, and in a word | |
To turn all morals upside down. Traitors | |
To country and to parents men have been | |
For fear, the appalling fear, of Acheron. | 86 |
For when men say a life of infamy | |
And foul diseases is more terrible | |
Than death’s deep pit, and that they know that blood | |
Is what the spirit is made of, or even wind, | |
(If so the fancy takes them) and that they have | |
No need of what my reasoning tells them, then | 45 |
I’ll show you that they speak thus seeking praise, | |
Boasting, and not because the matter’s proved. | |
These men in exile, banished from their homes, | |
Far from the sight of men, stained by foul charges, | |
Cursed, in a word, by every misery, | |
Yet live; and despite their words they sacrifice | 50 |
To their ancestral gods, they slay black cattle, | |
They send oblations to the ghosts below, | |
And in their bitter straits they turn their minds | |
More keenly now than ever to religion. | |
Thus, when in perils and adversity | 55 |
A man has fallen, it’s more useful then | |
To look at him and easier to know him. | |
For only then from out the heart’s deep core | |
True voices rise, the mask’s stripped off, the man | |
Remains. Greed and blind lust for fame | |
Moreover, which compel men to transgress | |
The bounds of law, and often times make them, | 60 |
Allies and ministers of crime, strive night and day | |
With toil and sweat to gain the heights of power, | |
These wounds of life in no small part are fed | |
By fear of death. For ’tis the common view | |
That shameful scorn and bitter poverty | |
Are far removed from a sweet and stable life, | 65 |
And, as it were, are simply lingering | |
Before the gates of death. From which, when men | |
Driven by groundless fear desire to flee | |
And to remove themselves far, far away, | |
By civil strife they make wealth for themselves | 70 |
And heap up riches, murder upon murder | |
Piling in greed. A brother’s death gives joy. | |
A kinsman’s board supplies both hate and fear. | |
By similar reasoning, born of the same fear, | |
Envy consumes them; that he before their eyes | 75 |
Gets power, is known, parades in pomp and show, | |
While they the while in darkness and in filth | |
Lie wallowing—that’s their complaint, you see! | |
Some die to get a statue and a name. | |
And often too, crazed by the fear of death, | |
Such hate of life and light possesses them | 80 |
That their own deaths they plan, with sorrowing heart, | |
Forgetting that this fear begets their woes. | 82 |
For we, like children frightened of the dark, | 87 |
Are sometimes frightened in the light—of things | |
No more to be feared than fears that in the dark | |
Distress a child, thinking they may come true. | 90 |
Therefore this terror and darkness of the mind | |
Not by the sun’s rays, nor the bright shafts of day, | |
Must be dispersed, as is most necessary, | |
But by the face of nature and her laws. | |
First I say that the mind, which we often call | |
The intelligence, in which is situated | |
The understanding and the government | 95 |
Of life, is a part of man, no less than hands | |
And feet and eyes are part of the living being, | |
Though many wise philosophers have thought | |
That it is not placed in a definite part, but is | |
A sort of vital essence of the body, | |
Called harmony by the Greeks, which makes us live | 100 |
Endowed with feeling, though the intelligence | |
Is not in any part; as when the body | |
Is said to be in good health, but health is not | |
A part of it, so in no definite place | |
They place the mind—and here they plainly err | |
Exceedingly, in many different ways. | 105 |
For often the body, which we see, is sick | |
And yet in another part, which we cannot see, | |
We’re happy. And conversely, in its turn, | |
The opposite applies, as when a man | |
Though sick in mind in body flourishes. | |
Let’s take another case—a man hurts his foot, | 110 |
It doesn’t mean he gets a headache too! | |
Again, when limbs are given to gentle sleep | |
And body without senses lies outstretched, | |
There’s something in us all the time that feels | |
In many ways, and takes into itself | |
Movements of pleasure and the heart’s vain cares. | 115 |
Next, that the spirit also you may know | |
Lies in our limbs, and that it is not harmony | |
That makes the body feel, firstly it happens | |
That if a great part of the body be taken away | |
Yet oft within our limbs life still remains. | 120 |
Again, when a few particles of heat | |
Have fled abroad, and outwards through the mouth | |
Air is expelled, at once this same spirit | |
Deserts the veins and leaves the bones. From this | |
You will recognize that not all particles | |
Work the same way or support life equally. | 125 |
But those that are seeds of wind and warming heat | |
Secure that life still lingers in our limbs. | |
Therefore there is within the body heat | |
And vital wind which at the point of death | |
Deserts our frame and causes us to die. | |
Well then, since we have recognized that mind | 130 |
And spirit are in some way a part of man, | |
Give back the name of harmony, brought down | |
To those musicians from high Helicon; | |
Maybe they found it somewhere else, and gave | |
The name to something till then nameless. Anyway | |
Whatever it is, let them keep it. And you | |
Please listen to the rest of what I say. | 135 |