Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
I tell you now that mind and spirit are | |
Conjoined and in one single nature fixed, | |
But head and master as it were of all | |
The body, is the understanding, which we call | |
Mind and intelligence. It has its seat | |
Placed in the middle region of the breast. | 140 |
For here throb fear and terror, here abides | |
Sweet melting joy, and therefore intelligence | |
And mind are. And the rest of the spirit, | |
Through the whole body diffused, obeys the will | |
Of mind and working of intelligence. | |
Mind by itself alone has sense, alone | |
Rejoices for itself, when nothing moves | 145 |
Spirit or body. And just as when our head | |
Or eye is hurt by an attack of pain, | |
The whole body is not tormented, so | |
The mind sometimes itself alone is hurt | |
Or thrills with joy, while the spirit’s other part | 150 |
Throughout our limbs and frame remains unmoved. | |
But when the mind is strongly gripped by fear | |
We see the whole spirit throughout the frame | |
Share the same feeling; we sweat, grow pale, | |
Our speech is broken, the voice dies away, | 155 |
Our eyes grow dark, our ears are filled with noise, | |
Our limbs give way; in short, through mental terror | |
We see men fall to the ground. From this we know | |
That spirit is linked with mind; when struck by mind | |
The spirit drives the body and compels it. | 160 |
This reasoning likewise shows that mind and spirit | |
Are bodily, for when we see that limbs are moved, | |
The body snatched from sleep, the countenance | |
Changed, the whole man ruled and steered, a thing | |
Impossible without touch, and touch in turn | 165 |
Impossible without body, must we not | |
Admit that mind and spirit are bodily? | |
Moreover you can see the mind to suffer | |
Along with the body, and to share its feeling. | |
If the grim power of a javelin, | 170 |
Driven deep into the bones and sinews, fails | |
To take the life, yet weakness follows, then | |
A fall to the ground, and on the ground a storm | |
In the mind, and sometimes as it were | |
A faint desire to rise. The nature of mind | |
Must therefore in itself be bodily, | 175 |
Since blows upon the body make it suffer. | |
This mind, I now propose to explain to you, | |
What kind of thing it is, and whence derived. | |
Most delicate it is I say and formed | |
Of atoms most minute. That this is so | 180 |
The following example may convince you. | |
Nothing is done so swiftly as the mind | |
Determines it to be done, and acts itself; | |
More quickly then the mind bestirs itself | |
Than anything else that comes before our eyes; | 185 |
But what is so readily moved must needs consist | |
Of seeds extremely round and most minute | |
So that a force though very small can move them. | |
Water moves easily and flows with little force | |
Because it is formed of smooth and rolling shapes. | 190 |
Honey conversely has more stability, | |
Its fluid is more sluggish and its movement | |
Slow, because the whole mass of its matter | |
Coheres more slowly, since it is not made | |
Of atoms so smooth and delicate and round. | 195 |
Take poppy seeds, a big high heap of them, | |
A breath of wind can make the top slide down, | |
But take a heap of stones or ears of wheat, | |
It cannot move them. So, you see, so far | |
As atoms are extremely small and smooth, | |
They have the power of motion; but heavy things | 200 |
And things that are rough have more stability. | |
Now therefore, since we have found the mind to be | |
Extremely mobile, of necessity | |
It must consist of atoms extremely small | |
And smooth and round. If this be known to you | 205 |
My friend, you’ll find it helps in many ways, | |
And you will call it valuable and useful. | |
This also shows its nature and how fine | |
Its texture is, and how minute a space | |
It would occupy if it could be massed together— | 210 |
As soon as death’s calm quiet takes a man | |
And mind and spirit have departed, then | |
Nothing from all the body can you see | |
Diminished, not in look nor weight, but death | |
Presents it all, less only sense and warmth. | 215 |
Therefore the entire spirit must consist | |
Of seeds extremely small, through veins, flesh, sinews, | |
Woven; wherefore, when all of it has left | |
The body, none the less the shape of limbs | |
Remains intact; no whit of weight is lost. | 220 |
The bouquet of wine is an example, or | |
The scent of ointment, or the flavour of something; | |
They disappear, but all the same no whit | |
Smaller the thing seems to our eyes, nor less | |
Is it in weight; no wonder, since minute | 225 |
Seeds are what make the flavour and the scent. | |
Wherefore again and yet again I say | |
The nature of the mind and spirit must | |
Of seeds extremely small be constituted, | |
Since when it flees it takes no weight away. | 230 |
But do not suppose that this nature is single. | |
When a man dies, a kind of thin breath, mixed | |
With heat, deserts him, and the heat draws air | |
Along with it. Nor is there any heat | |
That is not mixed with air, for since its nature | |
Is rarefied, then of necessity | 235 |
First elements of air must needs move through it. | |
Already therefore we have found that mind | |
Is threefold; but these three are not enough | |
To engender feeling, since no one of them | |
Is able to make the motions that bring sense, | |
Still less the thoughts that come into our minds. | 240 |
Therefore a fourth thing of some kind must be | |
Added, and this is wholly without name. | |
Nothing exists more easily moved than this, | |
Nor thinner nor made of elements more small | |
And smooth, and this first transmits through our limbs | 245 |
Sense-giving motions. For this first is moved | |
Being smallest, next heat and the blind power of wind | |
Take on the movement, then the air, then everything | |
Is moved, the blood is stirred, the flesh is thrilled | |
All through with feeling, bones and marrow feel | 250 |
Pleasure perhaps, or pleasure’s opposite. | |
Nor can pain penetrate thus far, or violent ill, | |
But that they cause so much disquiet that | |
No place is left for life, the spirit flees | |
Dispersed through all the channels of the body. | 255 |
But usually, as it were at the body’s surface | |
These movements end; so we keep hold on life. | |
Now when I long to explain how these things are | |
Mingled among themselves, and in what ways | |
Arranged they are active, then against my will | |
The poverty of our language holds me back. | 260 |
But the chief points I’ll touch on, as best I can. | |
The first beginnings move among themselves | |
So closely that no single one of them | |
Is separate or has power to act alone | |
Divided from the rest, but many of them | |
Compose together a kind of single body. | 265 |
As in the flesh of any animal | |
There is a certain scent and heat and flavour | |
Yet from all these one body is made complete, | |
So heat and air and the blind power of wind | |
Mixed form one nature, with that moving force | 270 |
Which from itself dispenses the beginning of motion, | |
The sense-bringer, from which through all the body | |
Movement first begins. For deep deep down | |
This nature hidden lies, and far beneath; | |
Nothing so deep in all our body lies, | |
The spirit of the very spirit itself. | 275 |
Just as, mixed in our limbs and all our body, | |
The force of mind and power of spirit lies hid, | |
Made as it is of few small elements, | |
So does this nameless force made of minute | 280 |
Atoms lie hid, spirit of spirit, and lord | |
Of all the body. So likewise must wind | |
And air and heat all mingled interact | |
Throughout our limbs, one yielding place to another | |