Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
He does not really accept what he professes, | |
He does not wholly remove himself from life, | |
But all unknown to himself he makes something | |
Of himself to survive and go on living. | |
For when in life he tells himself his future | |
That after death his body by wild beasts | 880 |
And birds will be devoured, torn to pieces, | |
He’s pitying himself. For he doesn’t separate | |
Himself from the body lying there, he thinks | |
It is still himself, and standing by it gives | |
Some part of his own feeling to it. | |
Hence he resents that he was born mortal, | |
He does not see that in real death there’ll be | 885 |
No other self that living could bewail | |
His perished self, or stand by to feel pain | |
In body torn or burnt. For if in death | |
It is painful to be mangled by wild beasts, | |
I do not see how it is not also painful | |
Laid on a pyre to shrivel in hot flames | 890 |
Or to be packed in honey and stifled, or | |
To lie stiff with cold upon a marble slab, | |
Or to be crushed under a weight of earth. | 893 |
Men lie at table, goblets in their hands | 912 |
And garlands on their brows; and in their hearts | |
They say ‘Short is the joy of men, | |
Too soon it is gone and none can e’er recall it.’ | 915 |
As if in death their chief trouble will be | |
A parching thirst or burning drought, or a desire | |
For something that they crave and cannot get. | 918 |
‘No longer now a happy home will greet you | 894 |
Nor loving wife, nor your sweet children run | |
To snatch your kisses and to touch your heart | |
With silent sweet content. Nor shall you prosper | |
In your life’s work, a bulwark to your people. | |
Unhappy wretch,’ they cry, ‘one fatal day | |
Has taken all those sweets of life away.’ | |
But this they do not add, that the desire | 900 |
Of things like these hangs over you no more. | |
Which if their minds could truly see and words | |
Follow, why, then from great distress and fear | |
They’ld free themselves. ‘You in the sleep of death | |
Lie now and will forever lie, removed | 905 |
Far from all pain and grief. But we, who saw | |
You turned to ashes on a dreadful pyre, | |
Mourned you in tears insatiable. For ever | |
No day will lift that sorrow from our hearts.’ | |
Then we must ask, what bitterness is this, | |
If all things end in sleep and quiet, that | 910 |
A man can waste away in ceaseless grief. | 911 |
For no one feels the want of himself and his life | 919 |
When mind and body alike are quiet in sleep. | 920 |
For all we care, that sleep might have no end. | |
Free from all yearning for ourselves we lie. | |
And yet, when a man springs up, startled from sleep | |
And pulls himself together, through our limbs | |
Those first beginnings are never far away | |
From the sense-giving motions of the body. | 925 |
Therefore much less to us must death be thought | |
To be, if anything can be less than what | |
We see to be nothing. For matter is thrown apart | |
More widely after death, and no one wakes | |
When once death’s chilling pause has halted him. | 930 |
Again, suppose that nature suddenly | |
Finding a voice upbraided one of us | |
In words like these: ‘What ails you, mortal man, | |
And makes you wallow in unhealthy grief? | |
Why do you moan and groan and weep at death? | |
For if your former life now past has pleased you | 935 |
And if your blessings through a broken jar | |
Have not run out, all wasted, unenjoyed, | |
Why don’t you, like a man that’s wined and dined | |
Full well on life, bow out, content, and so | |
Your exit make and rest in peace, you fool? | |
But if the things you’ve liked and loved are spent | 940 |
And life’s a grievance to you, why then seek | |
To add more? They will go just like the others, | |
No joy at all, and all will end in dust. | |
Better to make an end of life and trouble. | |
For there is nothing else I can devise | |
To please you. Always everything’s the same. | 945 |
And if your body not yet by the years | |
Is worn and fails, yet everything remains | |
The same. There is no change, even if you live | |
Longer than anyone on earth, and even more | |
If it should be your fate never to die.’ | |
What answer can we give to this, except | 950 |
That nature’s charge is just and that this speech | |
Makes a good case, from which we’re not acquitted? | |
Consider now an old man who complains | |
Excessively about his death to come. | |
Nature would justly cry out louder still | |
And say in bitter words, ‘Away, you rogue, | |
With all these tears and stop this snivelling. | |
All life’s rewards you have reaped and now you’re withered, | 955 |
But since you always want what you have not got | |
And never are content with that you have, | |
Your life has been unfulfilled, ungratifying, | |
And death stands by you unexpectedly | |
Before the feast is finished and you are full. | 960 |
Come now, remember you’re no longer young | |
And be content to go; thus it must be.’ | |
She would be right, I think, to act like this, | |
Right to rebuke him and find fault with him. | |
For the old order always by the new | |
Thrust out gives way; and one thing must from another | 965 |
Be made afresh; and no one ever falls | |
Into the deep pit and black Tartarus. | |
Matter is needed for the seeds to grow | |
Of future generations. Yes, but all | |
When life is done will follow you, and all | |
Before your time have fallen, and will fall. | |
So one thing from another will always come. | 970 |
And life none have in freehold, all as tenants. | |
Look back upon the ages of time past | |
Eternal, before we were born, and see | |
That they have been nothing to us, nothing at all. | |
This is the mirror nature holds for us | |
To show the face of time to come, when we | |
At last are dead. Is there in this for us | 975 |
Anything horrible? Is there anything sad? | |
Is it not more free from care than any sleep? | |
And all those things, for sure, which fables tell | |
Exist deep down in Acheron, exist | |
For us in this our life. No Tantalus | 980 |
Unhappy wretch fears the great rock that hangs | |
In the air above him, frozen with vain terror. | |
No. It is in this life that the fear of gods | |
Oppresses mortals without cause: the fall | |
They fear is that which chance may bring to them. | |
No Tityos lying in Acheron is torn | |
By vultures, nor through all eternity | |
Dig though they may can they find anything | 985 |
In that vast breast; and though his frame be spread | |
Immense to cover not nine acres only | |
But the whole globe of earth with limbs outstretched, | |
Yet not forever will he suffer pain | 990 |
Nor from his body furnish food always. | |
Our Tityos is here, lying in love, | |
And torn by winged cares (anxiety | |
Consumes him) or tortured by some other craving. | |
Sisyphus also in this life appears | 995 |
Before our eyes. He seeks the people’s votes | |
Athirst to get the Lictor’s rods and axes, | |
And always loses and retires defeated. | |
For to seek power that’s empty and never got | |
And always vainly toil and sweat for it | |
This is to strain to push up the steep hill | |
The rock that always from the very top | 1000 |
Rolls headlong down again to the plain below. | |
Another simile! The Danaids. | |
To be always feeding an ungrateful mind | |
And fill it with good things, and yet never | |
To satisfy it (as the seasons do | 1005 |
When they come round bringing their fruits and all | |
Their manifold delights, and yet we are never | |
Filled full with all the varied fruits of life), | |
This I believe is what the story means | |
Of young and lovely girls that must pour water | |
Into a leaking urn, and all their pains | |