Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
In front of it, and so this first we sense | |
Before we see the object in the mirror; | |
That is why it appears to be so far within it. | |
Wherefore again and yet again I say | |
It is by no means right to be surprised | |
At this appearance of objects reflected | |
In the surface of a mirror, since they involve | 290 |
A double journey with two streams of air. | |
Now why is it that the right side of our body | |
Appears in a mirror on the left? This is because | |
When the approaching image strikes the mirror | |
It is not turned round intact, but flung straight back | 295 |
In reverse, as if someone should throw a mask | |
Of plaster before it is dry against a pillar | |
So that it bounces straight back keeping the features | |
Set on its front, but showing them in reverse. | |
In this case what was the right eye would become | 300 |
The left, and the left eye again the right. | |
An image may also pass from mirror to mirror | |
So that five or six reflections are produced. | |
For things can be out of sight at the back of a house | |
And yet however far removed they are | 305 |
Through twisting passages can all be brought out | |
By a number of mirrors, and be seen to be inside. | |
So does the image shine from mirror to mirror. | |
And when the left is given it comes back right | |
And then comes back again turned round to the same position. | 310 |
Moreover, mirrors that have small sides that are curved | |
In the same degree as our sides send back images | |
Right to our right and unreversed. Either | |
Since the image is carried across from mirror to mirror | |
And then flies to us having been twice reflected, | 315 |
Or since the image is turned round when it approaches | |
As the curved shape of the mirror turns it towards us. | |
Sometimes the images march along with us | |
Keeping step with us and mimicking our gestures. | |
This is because if you move from a part of a mirror | 320 |
At once the images cannot return from that part. | |
Nature compels all things that strike a mirror | |
To be reflected back at equal angles. | |
Now here is another thing: the eyes avoid | |
Bright objects and refuse to gaze at them. | |
The sun will blind you if you stare at it. | 325 |
This is because its power is very great | |
And from on high through the pure air the images | |
Travel with great momentum and strike the eyes | |
And in so doing disrupt the structure of them. | |
And any strong brightness often burns the eyes | |
For the reason that it contains many seeds of fire | 330 |
Which cause pain to the eyes by piercing them. | |
People with jaundice see everything yellow. | |
This is because many seeds of yellow colour | |
Stream from their bodies to meet the images of things; | |
And many such seeds are mingled in their eyes | 335 |
And by their contact paint everything with pallor. | |
Again, we see in the dark things in the light | |
Because, when the black air of darkness, being nearer, | |
Has entered our eyes and taken possession of them | |
There follows immediately a bright clear air | 340 |
Which purifies them as it were and scatters | |
The black shades of the first air; for this bright air | |
Is made of particles much more minute | |
And much more mobile and more powerful; | |
As soon as this has filled the paths of the eyes | |
And opened them, which previously were beset | 345 |
By the black air, at once the images of things | |
That are in the light follow and make us see them. | |
But on the contrary, we cannot see | |
Out of the light things that are in the dark, | |
And this is why: a grosser air of darkness | 350 |
Follows behind, fills every pore, blockades | |
The channels of the eyes, so that no images | |
Thrown off from things in any way can move them. | |
And when we see the square towers of a city | |
From far away, they often appear to be round. | |
This is because every angle when seen at a distance | 355 |
Is blurred, or rather is not seen at all. | |
Its flow is lost, it does not strike our eyes, | |
And the air, while the images travel so far through it, | |
Inflicts many blows upon them and blunts them. | |
So when every angle has escaped our vision | 360 |
The stone structures appear as though turned on a lathe, | |
Not like things really round that are seen close to, | |
But in a shadowy way they mimic them. | |
Our shadow also appears to move in the sun, | |
To follow our footsteps, imitate our gestures, | 365 |
If you can conceive that air without light can walk | |
And follow the movements and gestures of men; | |
For what we are accustomed to call shadow | |
Can be nothing else than air deprived of light. | |
Doubtless because the air in certain places | 370 |
One after another is deprived of the sun’s light | |
Wherever in our movements we obstruct it, | |
And the point which we have left is filled again; | |
That is why the successive shadows of our body | |
Seem to be the same shadow always following us. | |
For always new rays of light are pouring out | 375 |
And the first are consumed, like wood thrown into a flame. | |
Thus easily the earth is robbed of light | |
And is replenished as it washes away | |
The stain of the black shadows darkening it. | |
And here we do not concede in any way | |
That the eyes are deluded. For their task it is | |
To see in what place light is, and where shadow; | 380 |
But whether one light is the same as another, | |
Whether the shadow that was here is now moving there, | |
Or rather what happens is what I have just described, | |
That the mind’s reasoning power must discern. | |
Eyes cannot understand the nature of things. | 385 |
Do not then blame the eyes for this fault of the mind. | |
A ship we sail in moves while it seems to stand still. | |
A ship at anchor seems to be passing by, | |
And hills and plains appear to fly astern | |
When we drive our vessel past them with flying sails. | 390 |
The stars in all the vaults of heaven seem fixed | |
And still, yet all are in constant motion, | |
Since to their distant setting they return | |
When with bright bodies they have crossed the sky. | |
The sun and moon likewise seem to stand still | 395 |
In their places, though the facts show that they move. | |
In the midst of the ocean mountains rise far off, | |
Between them lies a channel for a fleet, | |
And yet they seem to form a single island. | |
When children spinning round have come to a stop | 400 |
They seem to see halls and pillars whirling round | |
So vividly that they can scarce believe | |
That the whole roof will not fall in on them. | |
And when with flickering fires nature begins | |
To lift her red glow on high, above the hills, | 405 |
The glowing sun seems to be close upon them | |
And touching them with its own heat and fire. | |
Yet scarce two thousand bowshots are they distant | |
Or even five hundred throws of a javelin; | |
But far between them and the sun there lie | 410 |
Enormous tracts of ocean spread below | |
Vast regions of the sky, and many thousands | |
Of lands lie in between where many men | |
And varied nations dwell and tribes of beasts. | |
A puddle no more than a finger deep | |
Lying between stones on a paved highway | 415 |
Gives a view downwards below the earth as far | |
As the expanse of sky that yawns above, | |
So that you seem to look down upon the clouds | |
And see the heavenly bodies wonderfully | |
Deep-buried in a heaven below the earth. | |
Again, when in midstream our lively horse | 420 |
Stands fast, and we look down upon the waves | |
Of the river flowing rapidly, a force | |
Seems to be carrying his body sideways | |
And to push it violently against the stream, | |
And wherever we turn our eyes, everything seems | |
To be rushing and flowing in a similar way. | 425 |
A colonnade of equal width throughout | |
Supported by pillars of equal height | |