Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
With consciousness divine, since they are unable | |
To be animated with the breath of life. | 145 |
Another thing you cannot believe is this: | |
That holy dwelling places of the gods | |
Exist in any regions of this world. | |
For the nature of the gods is thin, and far removed | |
From our senses, and is hardly perceived by the mind. | |
We cannot touch it with our hands; therefore | 150 |
It cannot touch anything that we can touch. | |
For that cannot touch which cannot itself be touched. | |
Wherefore their dwelling places also must differ | |
From ours, being thin, like the thinness of their bodies. | |
This I will prove to you later at some length. | 155 |
Also, to say that for the sake of men | |
The gods willed the creation of the world | |
With all its brilliant fabric, and therefore | |
We ought to praise their most praiseworthy work | |
And think it everlasting and immortal, | |
And that a thing by the gods’ ancient rule | 160 |
Founded for all time for the race of men | |
May not by any force at any time | |
Be shaken, or be challenged by argument, | |
And turned right upside down—and to invent | |
Similar fictions, all this, Memmius, | |
Is nonsense. For what meed of gratitude | |
On gods immortal, blest, could we bestow | 165 |
That for our sakes they should do anything? | |
And what new thing after so long a time | |
Could tempt them in their blest tranquillity | |
To wish to change their old life for a new? | |
For to take pleasure in new things befits | 170 |
A man the old have hurt; but when past years | |
Have brought no ill, and life is sweet, what then | |
Could kindle a desire for novelty? | |
What ill had it been for us had we not been made? | |
Did our life lie in darkness and in grief | 175 |
Until creation’s light first shone abroad? | |
A man once born must wish to stay in life | |
So long as soothing pleasure keeps him there. | |
But he who has never tasted love of life | |
Or ever been enrolled among the living, | |
How does it hurt him not to have been made? | 180 |
Another point. The pattern of creation, | |
The very concept of mankind, how did it come | |
Into the minds of gods, that they should know | |
What they wanted to make, and grasp it with their minds? | |
How was the power of atoms ever known, | |
What they could do by changes of position, | 185 |
Had nature herself not given a model for creation? | |
So many atoms in so many ways | |
Smitten with blows through infinite time, and massed | |
By their own weights together, have combined | |
In every way, tried every variation, | 190 |
Of things that by them ever could be made. | |
No wonder then if into those positions | |
And into those movements they came, by which | |
Though always new this world is kept in being. | |
But even if I had no knowledge of atoms, | |
This from the order of the heavens itself | 195 |
And many other facts I would assert— | |
That in no way for us the power of gods | |
Fashioned the world and brought it into being; | |
So great the fault with which it stands endowed. | |
In the first place, of all that lies beneath | 200 |
The mighty sweep of sky, a greedy part | |
Mountains possess and forests full of wild beasts. | |
Rocks hold it, and vast marshes, and the sea | |
Which widely separates the shores of lands. | |
Nearly two thirds are kept from mortal use | |
By burning heat and constant fall of frost; | 205 |
What land is left, nature by her own power | |
Would choke with brambles did not man resist, | |
Man, for the sake of life well used to groan | |
Over strong mattock and cleave earth with plough. | |
Unless the ploughshare turn the fruitful clods | 210 |
And we, working the soil, bring them to birth, | |
No plants can ever of their own accord | |
Spring up into the melting air above. | |
And even sometimes when with great labour won | |
They fill the smiling earth with leaf and flower, | |
Either the sun in heaven scorches them | 215 |
Or sudden rains destroy them, or chilling frosts, | |
And storms with violent whirlwinds harass them. | |
Consider now the wild beasts’ fearsome breed, | |
Enemies of mankind by land and sea, | |
Why does nature feed them? Why do the seasons bring | 220 |
Diseases? Why does death untimely stalk abroad? | |
And then the child, like sailor cast ashore | |
By cruel waves, lies naked on the ground, | |
Sans speech, sans all the aids that life requires, | |
When nature first into the shores of light | |
In throes has cast him from his mother’s womb, | 225 |
And fills the place with cries—as well he might | |
Seeing that so great ills await his life. | |
But flocks and herds and wild beasts live and grow | |
Without the aid of rattles; they don’t want | |
The baby talk of nurses petting them | 230 |
Nor change of clothing with the changing year, | |
Nor have they need of arms or lofty walls | |
To guard their goods, since earth all things to all | |
Brings forth in bounty and nature’s skill supplies. | |
Well now, in the first place since earth and water | 235 |
And the light breaths of air and burning heat, | |
From which we see this sum of things is made— | |
Since these have bodies which are born and die, | |
Of the whole world we must believe the same. | |
For things of which we see that their parts and limbs | 240 |
Consist of matter which is born and dies, | |
We know that these same things are certainly | |
Subject to birth and death. So when I see | |
The mighty members of the world consumed | |
And born again, why, then I may be sure | 245 |
That heaven and earth likewise had their beginning | |
And in destruction too will have their end. | |
Please do not think that I have begged the question | |
When I assume that earth and fire are mortal | |
And do not doubt that air and water perish, | |
And say that they are born and grow again. | 250 |
Take the earth first. A large part of it, burnt | |
By constant sun and beaten by myriad feet, | |
Breathes out a cloud of dust and flying mists | |
Which strong winds scatter abroad all through the air. | |
Part of the soil also is washed away | 255 |
By rain, and rivers scrape away their banks; | |
Besides, whatever the earth throws up returns | |
In due proportion; and since beyond doubt we see | |
The mother of all to be their common grave, | |
Therefore, my friend, you see the earth is diminished | |
And then in turn increased and grows again. | 260 |
And next, there is no need of words to say | |
How sea, rivers, and springs are always full | |
With waters new and streams forever flow: | |
The mighty fall of waters everywhere | |
Makes this quite plain. But the front part of the flood | |
Is lifted off and drawn away, and so | |
In total there is no excess of water; | 265 |
Partly because strong winds sweeping its surface | |
Diminish it, and the sun’s high rays unravel it, | |
Partly because it seeps through the earth below, | |
The brine is filtered off, and the mass of water | |
Oozes back and joins the rivers at their source, | 270 |
And thence, in a column of sweet water, | |
Over the ground it flows along the path | |
Cut once by liquid foot to guide the waters. | |
Air next I’ll speak of, which throughout its body | |
Changes innumerably hour by hour. | |
Always whatever flows off from things is carried | 275 |
Into the great ocean of the air; unless in turn | |
The air gave matter back to things again | |
And in their flux created them anew, | |
All would by now be dissolved and changed into air. | |
Therefore forever air is born from things | |
And falls back into things, since it is certain | |
That all things are continually in flux. | 280 |
The eternal sun, rich fountain of clear light, | |
Forever floods the sky with radiance new, | |
Swiftly supplying new light in place of old. | |