Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
Phantoms of stags as though they saw them in flight | |
Until, the error spent, they come to their senses. | |
A litter of soft puppies, household pets, | |
Will shake themselves and jump up, just as if | 1000 |
They saw the forms and faces of strangers coming in. | |
And the fiercer the breed, the wilder it is in its dreams. | |
And birds fly up and suddenly at night | |
With whirring wings disturb the gods’ dark groves, | |
If in their quiet sleep dreams come to them | |
Of hawks stooping to the fray in hot pursuit. | 1010 |
And mighty men do mighty deeds in dreams. | |
Kings conquer, and are captured, and give battle, | |
And scream with the assassin’s dagger at their throats, | |
All without moving from the spot. Men fight | 1015 |
And groan in pain and fill the air with cries | |
As if in the jaws of a panther or a lion. | |
And men in sleep things of great moment tell | |
And by their words themselves betray their guilt. | |
Many meet death. And many from high cliffs | 1020 |
Feeling themselves falling are beside themselves | |
And start from sleep almost out of their minds, and hardly | |
Recover from the torment of their body. | |
A thirsty man oft sits beside a river | |
Or pleasant spring and nearly drinks it up. | 1025 |
And often boys held fast in sleep believe | |
They are standing by a privy or chamber pot | |
Lifting their clothes, and pour out all the fluid | |
That has filtered through their body and drench the sheets | |
And splendid Babylonian coverlets. | |
And others, when the seed first penetrates | 1030 |
The racing tides of youth, as time matures it, | |
Meet with a wandering image from some body | |
That tells of lovely face and rosy cheeks, | |
And this excites the parts swelling with seed, | |
And so, as if the act were being performed, | 1035 |
They pour a great flood out and stain their clothes. | |
This seed I speak of is stirred up in us | |
As soon as manhood in our limbs grows strong. | |
And different things respond to different forces. | |
But only man from man draws human seed. | 1040 |
As soon as seed comes out from its retreats, | |
It travels through every member of the body | |
And gathers in a fixed place in the loins | |
And arouses straight away the genital parts. | |
The parts swell with the seed, then comes desire | 1045 |
To eject it where the dire craving pulls | |
And the body seeks that which has wounded the mind with love. | |
For men in battle fall towards a wound | |
And the blood spurts out in the direction of the blow | 1050 |
And if he is close the foe is drenched in blood. | |
So therefore when the shafts of Venus strike, | |
Whether a boy with girlish limbs has thrown it | |
Or a woman from her whole body launches love, | |
He leans towards the blow, desires to unite, | 1055 |
And cast the fluid from body into body; | |
His speechless yearning tells of bliss to come. | |
This is our Venus; hence the name of love; | |
Hence into the heart distilled the drop | |
Of Venus’ sweetness, and numbing heartache followed. | 1060 |
For if what you love is absent, none the less | |
Its images are there, and the sweet name | |
Sounds in your ears. Ah, cursed images! | |
Flee them you must and all the food of love | |
Reject, and turn the mind away, and throw | |
The pent-up fluid into other bodies, | 1065 |
And let it go, not with one single love | |
Straitjacketed, not storing in your heart | |
The certainty of endless cares and pain. | |
For feeding quickens the sore and strengthens it, | |
And day by day the madness grows and woe | |
Is heaped on woe, unless the first wounds by new blows | 1070 |
Are deadened and while the wound’s still fresh you cure it | |
By wandering with Venus of the streets, | |
Or to some newer purpose turn your mind. | |
And by avoiding love you need not miss | |
The fruits that Venus offers, but instead | |
You may take the goods without the penalty. | |
For sure from this a purer pleasure comes | 1075 |
To the healthy than to the lovesick. Yes, for in | |
The moment of possession lovers’ minds | |
Are all at sea storm-tossed, confused, and can’t | |
Decide what first to enjoy with eye or hand, | |
They hurt the body they love, so close they press, | |
They kiss so fiercely that teeth enter lips, | 1080 |
All this because the pleasure is not pure, | |
And hidden stings there are which make them harm | |
Whatever it be from which the frenzy comes. | |
But in their loving Venus lightly lifts | |
The penalties she inflicts, and soothing pleasure | 1085 |
Holds back the sting; for there is hope in it | |
That the same body whence the frenzy came | |
May have the power also to quench the fire— | |
And that does nature totally reject. | |
This is the only thing for which the more we have | |
The more the heart burns with fell desire for it. | 1090 |
For food and drink are taken into the body | |
And since they can enter their appointed places | |
Easily the desire for water and bread is met. | |
But from a pretty face or rosy cheeks | |
Nothing comes into the body to enjoy | 1095 |
But images, thin images, fond hopes, | |
For often they are scattered to the winds. | |
As when in dreams a thirsty man seeks water | |
And none is given to quench the fire within | |
But he seeks the image of the water all in vain | |
And standing in a river thirsts while he drinks, | 1100 |
So in love Venus mocks lovers with images. | |
They cannot satisfy their eyes with looking, | |
Nor with hands wandering aimless o’er the body | |
Can they glean anything from tender limbs; | |
And when at last with body clasped to body | 1105 |
They pluck the flower of youth, when body knows | |
The bliss to come and Venus is ready, poised | |
To sow the fields of love, they cling together | |
Mouth pressed to watering mouth and lips to lips | |
Drawing deep breaths as body calls to body. | |
In vain. For they can rub nothing off from it, | 1110 |
Neither can body be absorbed in body. | |
For that sometimes they seem to want and strive for, | |
So ardently in Venus’ toils they cling | |
Their limbs with rapture liquefied and melted. | |
At last when all the pent-up lust is spent | 1115 |
There comes a brief pause in the raging fever; | |
But then the fit returns, madness comes back, | |
They ask themselves what it is they are craving for, | |
They can find no device to cure their ill, | |
Bewildered and confused they waste away, | |
The hapless victims of an unseen wound. | 1120 |
And add this also, they consume their strength, | |
The effort kills them; and their days are passed | |
Obeying another’s whim. Wealth vanishes | |
Turned into Babylonian coverlets. | |
Duties neglected, reputation falls. | |
For her, soft lovely slippers from Sicyon | 1125 |
Shine on her feet, great emeralds set in gold | |
Glow with green light, the sea-blue dress well worn | |
In constant use absorbs the sweat of Venus. | |
The family’s wealth, hard earned, binds up her hair | |
Turned into a tiara or becomes | |
A gown of silk from Elis or from Ceos. | 1130 |
Banquets with shining tables and rich fare, | |
Wines, dancers, ointments, garlands, ribbons— | |
All useless; since from the very fount of joy | |
Something bitter comes, and midst the flowers | |
Brings torment. Perchance a guilty conscience bites | 1135 |
With rue for years of idleness and vice, | |
Perchance she’s spoken some doubtful word which sticks | |
And burns like fire in his yearning heart; | |
Or else he thinks she moves her eyes too much, | |
Too many glances at another man, | |
And in her face a hint of mockery. | 1140 |
These evils can be found in love that prospers | |
And goes well; but in a love that’s starved and wretched | |
Though your eyes be closed they are there all plain to see, | |
Innumerable; so be on your guard, | |
Take my advice and keep your fancy free. | 1145 |