Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
For to avoid being captured in the snares of love | |
Is not so difficult as to escape | |
Once in, and break the powerful knots of Venus. | |
And yet, although entangled and ensnared, | |
You can escape this danger unless you stand | 1150 |
In your own way, and overlook the faults | |
In the body and the mind of her you love, | |
For this is what men blinded with desire | |
So often do, attributing to them | |
Virtues with which in truth they are not endowed. | |
So ugly and mis-shapen women are called | 1155 |
Sweet charmers and are held in highest honour. | |
A lover derides another, and urges him | |
To propitiate Venus since his love’s so foul, | |
But cannot see his own disastrous plight. | |
The dark girl is a nut-brown maid, the rank | |
And filthy is a sweet disorder. Is she green-eyed? | 1160 |
Then she’s grey-eyed Athene. Stringy and wooden? | |
Then she’s a gazelle. Is she a dwarf? Why then | |
She’s one of the Graces, the very soul of wit. | |
A giantess? She’s full of dignity. | |
If she stammers, she has a lisp. If dumb, she’s modest. | |
If she’s a fiery hateful chatterbox, | 1165 |
She’s a little squib. If she’s too thin to live, | |
She’s svelte and willowy. If she’s half dead | |
With coughing, then she’s delicate, you see. | |
Is she swollen, with enormous breasts? She’s Ceres | |
Suckling Iacchus. She’s a faun or satyr | |
If she’s snub-nosed. If she’s thick-lipped she’s ‘Kissie’. | |
I will not weary you with all the rest. | 1170 |
But let her have the finest face of all, | |
Let Venus radiate from all her body, | |
Still there are others; still we have lived so far | |
Without this woman; still, as well we know, | |
She does things which the plainest women do. | |
She fumigates herself, poor wretch, with odours | 1175 |
So foul and evil-smelling that her maids | |
Keep well away and laugh behind her back. | |
The lover, shut out, weeping, heaps the threshold | |
With flowers, anoints the proud doorposts with perfumes, | |
And plants his love-sick kisses on the door. | |
But, once admitted, one whiff would promptly make him | 1180 |
Seek some polite excuse to take his leave; | |
His fond complaint, deep-seated, long-rehearsed, | |
Would turn to nothing, he’ld damn his stupid folly | |
In placing her above all mortal women. | |
Our Venuses know this; hence the pains they take | 1185 |
To hide all that goes on behind the scenes | |
From those they wish to hold in chains of love. | |
In vain; for in your mind as clear as day | |
You can see it, and all those other absurdities. | |
And if you like her mind and she’s good-tempered, | |
Why then you in your turn can overlook | 1190 |
And make allowances for human frailty. | |
Not always is a woman feigning love | |
When she sighs and clings to a man in close embrace | |
And body pressed to body, lips to lips, | |
Moistens his mouth with hers to prolong his kisses. | |
Often she does it from the heart, and seeking | 1195 |
Shared mutual delights she rouses him | |
To run with her through all the lists of love. | |
And in no wise could birds and beasts and sheep | |
And mares and cattle to the male submit | |
But that their nature burns for it, and with joy | |
Receives the seed from the covering animal. | 1200 |
Do you not see how pairs whom mutual pleasure | |
Has bound are tortured in their common chains? | |
Dogs at a crossroads often you may see, | |
Wanting to part, pull hard with all their might | |
In different directions, while all the time | |
By the strong couplings of Venus they are held fast. | |
This they would never do unless both felt | 1205 |
Pleasures which lead them astray and hold them bound. | |
Wherefore again and again, I say, the pleasure is mutual. | |
And in the mingling of seed it sometimes happens | |
That the woman by a sudden move overcomes | |
The force of the man and takes control of it; | 1210 |
From the mother’s seed then children like the mother | |
Are born; as from the father’s children like the father. | |
But those you see with figures like to each | |
And faces like both parents’, these have sprung | |
From the father’s body and the mother’s blood | |
When under the goads of Venus through the limbs | 1215 |
The coursing seeds are driven, and dashed together | |
By two hearts breathing as one in mutual passion, | |
And neither masters the other nor is mastered. | |
It sometimes also happens that the children | |
May look like their grandparents or great-grandparents, | |
Since parents in their bodies oft conceal | |
Many first elements mixed in many ways, | 1220 |
And these deriving from ancestral stock | |
Fathers transmit to fathers. From these Venus | |
With varying lot makes shapes and reproduces | |
The look, the voice, the hair of ancestors; | |
Since from a fixed seed all these features come | 1225 |
No less than our faces and our limbs and bodies. | |
And female children spring from fathers’ seed | |
And male are made out of the mother’s substance; | |
For always birth derives from seeds of both. | |
Whichever parent the child most resembles, | 1230 |
Of that it has more than half; which you can see | |
Whether the progeny be male or female. | |
And it is not the power of gods that blocks | |
The generating seed in any man | |
So that no darling children call him father | |
And he drags out his years in barren love, | 1235 |
Which many think, and with much blood in tears | |
Sprinkle the altars, honour them with gifts, | |
To make their wives pregnant with abundant seed. | |
In vain do they importune gods and fates. | |
They are barren, some because the seed’s too thick, | 1240 |
Others because it is too watery and thin. | |
The thin, because it can’t stick in its place, | |
At once runs out and so returns aborted. | |
The thick comes out too closely clotted, and either | |
Cannot fly forward with far-reaching blow, | 1245 |
Or cannot penetrate the place, or else, once in, | |
Does not mix easily with the woman’s seed. | |
For sure love’s harmonies do greatly differ. | |
Some men more easily impregnate some women, | |
Some women more readily receive a man | |
And grow big from him. Many women barren | 1250 |
In earlier marriages have later found | |
A source from which they could bear little children | |
And with sweet progeny enrich themselves. | |
And often men whose fruitful wives have been | |
Unable to bear a child, for these also | |
A woman of matching nature has been found | 1255 |
To fortify their ageing years with children. | |
So much it matters that seeds can with seeds | |
Suited for generation be commingled, | |
Thick meeting watery, watery meeting thick. | |
It matters too what food supports the life, | 1260 |
For some foods make the seeds thicken in the body | |
And others make them thin and waste away. | |
What matters most of all is the position | |
In which the soothing pleasure itself is taken; | |
For in the manner of four-footed beasts, | |
It is generally thought that women best conceive, | 1265 |
Breast down and loins uplifted, so the seeds | |
Can take more easily their proper places. | |
Wives have no need at all of wanton movements. | |
For a woman avoids conception and fights against it, | |
If in delight she holds his penis close | 1270 |
Between her buttocks, and all her body limp, | |
Flows with the waves and sways with every tide. | |
She turns the furrow from its rightful course | |
Under the ploughshare, makes the seed fall wide. | |
Whores do this for their private purposes | |
Lest they be filled too often and lie pregnant, | 1275 |
And to make their loves more pleasing to their men. | |
Clearly our wives can find no use for this. | |
And not from power divine or Venus’ shafts | |
It sometimes happens that a wench is loved, | |
No beauty she; for sometimes she herself | |
By what she does, by person neat and clean, | 1280 |