Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
These things which men found out from life and need | |
Were doubtless fashioned for the sake of use. | |
Quite different are those things which came into being | |
Before any conception of their usefulness; | |
And first in this class are the senses and the limbs. | 855 |
Wherefore again and yet again I say | |
Banish from your mind the possibility | |
That they could have been made for the sake of usefulness. | |
Nor is there any reason to be surprised | |
That by the very nature of its body | |
Every animal seeks food. I have shown you that | |
Many atoms in many ways are thrown off from things, | 860 |
But most must come from animals. Always these are | |
In motion, and many atoms are pressed out | |
From deep down in sweat and many through the mouth | |
As they pant in exhaustion, so the body is rarefied | 865 |
And its nature undermined; and pain results. | |
So food is taken, to prop up the body, | |
And working inside renews the strength and stops | |
Through veins and limbs the gaping desire to eat. | |
And fluid also goes into all those parts | 870 |
That need it, and the massed particles of heat | |
That set our stomach in a blaze are scattered | |
By the fluid entering, and quenched like fire, | |
So the parching heat no longer burns our frame. | |
Thus then your panting thirst is swilled away | |
Out of the body, thus your famished craving | 875 |
Is satisfied, the body’s needs fulfilled. | |
Now I will tell you how it is that we walk | |
And can stride forward when we wish, and how | |
We are able to move our limbs in various ways, | |
And what it is that is wont to push along | |
Our body’s heavy weight. Please mark my words. | 880 |
I say that in the first place images | |
Of walking come in contact with the mind | |
And strike the mind, as I have said before. | |
Hence follows will: for no one ever begins | |
Anything unless the mind has first foreseen | |
What it wills to do (and what the mind foresees | |
Is the image of the thing). Therefore the mind | 885 |
When it conceives the wish of walking forward | |
Immediately strikes the mass of spirit | |
Dispersed through all the body and the limbs | |
(And this is easy for it, since it lives | |
In such close combination with the spirit). | |
The spirit then strikes the body, and so the whole mass | 890 |
Is gradually pushed forward into movement. | |
The body then also expands its pores, and air, | |
As is natural with something always mobile, | |
Pours into the opened passages and penetrates them, | |
Thus reaching the very smallest parts of the body. | 895 |
So thus by two things acting in two ways | |
The body is moved, like a ship by sails and wind. | |
Nor is there anything surprising here | |
That elements so small can turn so large | |
A body and twist our whole weight around. | 900 |
The wind, that is so subtle and so fine, | |
Drives on a mighty ship with mighty power, | |
And one hand rules it whatever its speed may be, | |
One rudder steers it whither you may will; | |
And many a heavy weight by blocks and pulleys | 905 |
A derrick can move and lift with little effort. | |
Next, in what way sleep floods the limbs with peace | |
And from the heart lets free the mind’s disquiet | |
I shall declare in verses sweet though few. | |
Better the swan’s brief song than that cry of cranes | 910 |
Spread by the south wind through the clouds on high. | |
Give me keen ears and understanding mind | |
Lest you deny that what I say can be, | |
And shrink back, your heart repelling words of truth | |
Though you are in fault yourself and cannot see it. | 915 |
In the first place, sleep comes when the power of the spirit | |
Is drawn apart through the body, and part of it | |
Cast forth has gone away, and part retreats | |
Into the depths compacted and compressed. | |
For only then the limbs relax and lie. | |
For there is no doubt that by the work of the spirit | 920 |
Sensation comes, and when sleep deadens it | |
We must suppose that the spirit has been disordered | |
And quite cast out; not all of it; for then the body | |
Would lie steeped in the eternal chill of death. | |
Since if no part of the spirit remained hidden | 925 |
In our body, as fire lies covered deep in ashes, | |
Whence could our feeling suddenly through the limbs | |
Rekindle, as flame leaps from hidden fire? | |
But by what cause this new state comes to pass | |
And whence the spirit can be disordered, and how | |
The body made to languish, I will explain. | 930 |
Please see that my words are not wasted on the winds. | |
First it must be that since the body is touched | |
By the motions of the air surrounding it | |
Its outer part by frequent blows of air | |
Is thumped and buffeted; and that is why | |
Nearly all things that live and grow are covered | 935 |
By skin or even shells or rind or bark. | |
The body’s inside also when we breathe | |
This same air strikes, drawn in and out. And so | |
Since the body is beaten outside and in, and since | |
The blows through tiny channels penetrate | 940 |
The primary parts and primal elements, | |
Slowly, collapse (as it were) occurs in the limbs. | |
The atoms of mind and body are dislodged | |
From their positions. Next part of the spirit | |
Is ejected out, and part withdraws within, | 945 |
And part also is scattered through the body | |
And so cannot unite and combine in motion. | |
For nature blocks the paths and meeting places, | |
So feeling sinks down deep when the motions are changed. | |
And since there is nothing to prop up the limbs, | 950 |
The body becomes weak, the limbs grow faint, | |
Arms and eyelids fall, and as we lie down | |
The knees give way and all their strength is gone. | |
Again sleep follows food, since it acts like air | |
When it has dissolved through all the veins. | 955 |
And much the deepest sleep is that which comes | |
From satiety or weariness, for then | |
The greatest number of atoms is disordered, | |
Bruised by much labour. Of the spirit too | |
In the same way a part is thrown together | |
At a greater depth, and the part ejected is greater, | 960 |
And the separations and divisions magnified. | |
And those pursuits which most we love to follow, | |
The things in which just now we have been engaged, | |
The mind being thus the more intent upon them, | |
These are most oft the substance of our dreams. | 965 |
Lawyers argue their cases and make laws, | |
Generals fight battles, leading troops to war, | |
Sailors pursue their struggles with the wind, | |
And I ply my own task and seek the nature of things | |
Always, and tell them in our native tongue. | 970 |
All other pursuits and arts seem thus in dreams | |
To hold the minds of men with their illusions. | |
When men have been to games and theatres | |
For many days, we usually see, | |
When they have ceased to observe these with their senses, | 975 |
That paths are left still open in the mind | |
By which the images of these things can enter. | |
For many days then these same things are moving | |
Before their eyes, so that even while awake | |
They seem to see dancers swaying supple limbs, | 980 |
And the lyre’s liquid notes and speaking strings | |
Enter their ears, and the same audience | |
They see and the varied glories of the stage. | |
So great is the effect of interest and pleasure | |
And of things which form the habits of men’s lives, | 985 |
Not only of men, but of all animals. | |
You will see horses, when they lie in sleep, | |
Break out in sweat and panting hard and fast | |
As if straining every nerve to win a race, | |
Or plunging from the opened starting gates. | 990 |
And often hounds lying in gentle sleep | |
Suddenly throw up their legs and all at once | |
Give tongue and keenly sniff the air, as if | |
They have found and held the scent of some wild beast. | |
And even when awake they often chase | 995 |