Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
And gentle pleasing ways can easily | |
Accustom you to share your life with her. | |
And for the rest—by custom love is bred. | |
Something which feels a blow, however light, | |
But frequently, must in the end give way. | 1285 |
Do you not see how even a drop of water | |
By constant dripping wears away a stone? | 1287 |
Who has the genius to build a song | |
Worthy of nature’s majesty, and worthy | |
Of these discoveries? Who can find fit words | |
To praise the man who left us such great treasures | |
Born from his breast and searched out by his mind? | 5 |
No one, I think, from mortal body sprung. | |
If I must speak, my noble Memmius, | |
As nature’s majesty now known demands, | |
He was a god, a god indeed, who first | |
Found out that rule and principle of life | |
Which bears the name of Wisdom, and by his skill | 10 |
Brought life out from such mighty waves and darkness | |
And placed it in such calm and light so clear. | |
Only compare the things that others found | |
In ancient time, and earned the name divine. | |
Ceres they say brought crops to mortal men | |
And Bacchus the vine-born liquor of the grape; | 15 |
But life without these things could still abide, | |
As even now they say some nations live. | |
But good life needs a heart that’s pure and clean. | |
So he more rightly earns the name of god | |
From whom even now through mighty nations spread | 20 |
Sweet solace comes to soothe the minds of men. | |
And if you think the deeds of Hercules | |
Can stand in rivalry with his, why then | |
You’ll stray much further from true reasoning. | |
What harm now could Nemean lion do | |
With gaping jaws, or bristling Arcadian boar? | 25 |
What harm the Cretan bull or Lerna’s pest, | |
The Hydra fenced about with poisonous snakes? | |
What threefold Geryon with his tripled breast? | |
What matter now Stymphalus’ horrid birds | |
And Diomed’s Thracian horses breathing fire | 30 |
In lands by Bistony and Ismara? | |
The golden apples of the Hesperides, | |
The snake that guards them with unsleeping eye, | |
Enormous body coiled around the tree, | |
What mischief by the wild Atlantic shore | 35 |
Could it now do, where no one ever comes | |
From lands we know, and natives fear to tread? | |
And all the other monsters of this kind, | |
All dead; but if they had not been slain, and still | |
Were living, why, what mischief could they do? | |
None as I think, seeing that even now | |
Earth teems with wild beasts and is filled with fear | 40 |
Through forests and great mountains and deep thickets; | |
Though as a rule it lies within our power | |
To shun these places, and leave them unvisited. | |
But unless the mind is purged, what battles then | |
And perils must enter it against our will! | |
How great then the sharp cares with which lust rends | 45 |
The troubled man, how great likewise the fears! | |
And what of pride and filth and wantonness? | |
What ruin they bring! and luxury and sloth? | |
He therefore who has mastered all these vices | |
And cast them from the mind by words, not arms, | 50 |
Will it not then be right to find him worthy | |
To be counted in the number of the gods? | |
Especially since in words from heaven inspired | |
He used to teach about the gods themselves, | |
And all the nature of the world make plain. | |
In his footsteps I tread and his great doctrines | 55 |
I follow, and in my poem I teach how all things | |
Must stay within the law of their creation | |
And cannot annul the strong statutes of time. | |
And herein first of all we have found that mind | |
Consists of body that first itself had birth | 60 |
And cannot last intact through endless years, | |
But images in dreams deceive the mind | |
When we seem to see a man whom life has left. | |
Next at this point the order of my theme | |
Leads me to show that all the whole wide world | |
Came into birth and in the end must die; | 65 |
And in what ways that mass of matter founded | |
The earth and sky and sea and stars and sun | |
And the moon’s orb; and then what animals | |
Arose from the earth, and what were never born; | 70 |
And how men first made use of varied speech | |
Among themselves by finding names for things; | |
And how into their minds that fear of gods | |
Crept in, which over all the world keeps holy | |
Shrines, pools, groves, altars, and images of gods; | 75 |
And by what force the courses of the sun | |
And the moon’s movements pilot nature steers, | |
I shall explain, lest haply we believe | |
That these between the earth and sky are free | |
Of their own will to make their yearly courses, | |
Meet for the growth of crops and animals, | 80 |
Or think they are turned by some design of gods. | |
For men who have been well taught about the gods | |
That they live free from care may wonder still | |
By what design the world goes on, not least | |
Those things they see in heaven above their heads; | 85 |
And then to the old religions back they turn, | |
And cleave to cruel masters whom they think, | |
Unhappy fools, to be all-powerful, | |
Not knowing what can be and what cannot, | |
Not knowing in a word how everything | |
Has finite power and deep-set boundary stone. | 90 |
To proceed, and make no more delay with promises, | |
First please observe the earth and sea and sky; | |
These three, a threefold nature, Memmius, | |
Three forms so unalike, so interwoven, | |
One day will give to destruction; all the mass | 95 |
And mighty engine of the world, upheld | |
For many centuries, will crash in ruin. | |
Nor do I fail to see how strange and new | |
This ruin of heaven and earth must strike the mind, | |
How hard it is to prove by words of mine; | |
As happens when some unaccustomed thing | 100 |
Comes to the ears, something eyes cannot grasp | |
Nor hands lay hold of, hands the surest way | |
To bring belief to hearts and minds of men. | |
Yet I’ll speak out. Perhaps the facts themselves | |
Will bring belief and in a little time | |
The earth with mighty movements torn apart | 105 |
You will see, and all the world convulsed with shocks. | |
This far from us may pilot fortune steer, | |
And reason rather than the event declare | |
The fearful crash that brings the world’s collapse. | |
And now, before I utter oracles | 110 |
More holy and more surely true than those | |
The Pythia speaks from Phoebus’ laurelled tripod, | |
With words of wisdom I shall comfort you; | |
Lest bridled by religion you may think | |
That earth and sun and sky, sea, stars, and moon | 115 |
Must last for ever, their bodies being divine; | |
Lest you should think that for a monstrous crime | |
Men should, like giants, suffer punishment | |
Whose reason shakes the ramparts of the world, | |
Willing to quench the shining sun in heaven | 120 |
And stain immortal things with mortal speech. | |
So far these things are from divinity, | |
So little worthy to be counted gods, | |
That we should rather find in them the pattern | |
Of things possessing neither life nor sense. | 125 |
For clearly not in any and every body | |
Can mind and can intelligence exist. | |
There can be no trees in the sky, no clouds | |
In the salt sea, nor fish live in the fields, | |
Nor blood exist in logs nor sap in stones. | 130 |
Everything has its place, certain and fixed, | |
Where it must live and grow and have its being. | |
So the mind cannot arise without the body, | |
Alone, nor exist apart from blood and sinews. | |
But if it could, then much more easily | |
It would place itself in head or shoulders, or right down | |
In heels, or indeed in any part, provided | 135 |
It were in the same man, the same vessel, enclosed; | |
And since, within the body, mind and spirit | |
By a fixed rule and ordinance are given | |
The place where they can live and grow apart, | |
All the more strongly then must we deny | |
That wholly outside body or animal form | 140 |
In crumbling clods of earth or the sun’s fire | |
They can live, or in water or the high shores of sky. | |
These things therefore for sure are not endowed | |