Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
For the first flash of light that comes is lost, | |
Wherever it falls. As you may learn from this: | 285 |
As soon as clouds begin to front the sun | |
And as it were break in between its rays, | |
The lower part of them at once is lost, | |
And the earth is in shadow, wherever the clouds move; | |
So you may see things always need new light, | 290 |
That every burst of radiance perishes, | |
That in no other way could things be seen | |
In sunlight, did the fount of light itself | |
Cease ever to maintain a fresh supply. | |
And lights that shine at night on earth, these too— | |
Your hanging lamps and torches flaming bright, | 295 |
Flaring and flashing through the pitchy smoke— | |
In the same way, fed by the fire, they haste | |
To bring up new supplies of light, and on | |
And on they press, alive with flickering flames, | |
Seeming to pour an unbroken stream of light; | |
So speedily is its extinction hid | 300 |
By the swift birth of flame from all the fires. | |
So you must think that sun and moon and stars | |
Send out quick bursts of light one after another, | |
And always the first flash of flame is lost; | |
And none of these is indestructible. | 305 |
And stones—these too you see that time subdues, | |
And lofty towers fall, their masonry | |
All crumbling, and the shrines and images | |
Of gods, wearied by time, are cracked and fall. | |
Nor can their holy power extend the bounds | |
Of fate, nor struggle against nature’s laws. | 310 |
The monuments of men collapsed we see, | |
Should we look there for immortality; | |
And rocks roll down, from lofty mountains torn, | |
Unable to endure the strong force of time, | |
Of finite time. For certainly no shock | 315 |
Could make them suddenly break off and fall, | |
If from time infinite they had withstood | |
Intact the assault and torment of the years. | |
Look last at that which above and all around | |
Holds the whole earth in its embrace. | |
If it is this, as some declare, that makes | 320 |
All things from itself and takes them back again | |
When their time is finished, it must all consist | |
Of matter subject to both birth and death. | |
For that which from itself feeds other things | |
And nourishes them, must be diminished, | |
And made anew when it receives them back. | |
Now here’s another point. If earth and sky | |
Had no beginning or no time of birth | 325 |
But have been always everlasting, why | |
Before the Theban war and doom of Troy | |
Have other poets not sung other things? | |
Where have so many deeds of men so many times | |
Fallen from sight and mind, and nowhere flower | |
Implanted on eternal monuments? | |
In truth I think the world is young and new | 330 |
And in quite recent time its life began. | |
See even now some arts are being refined | |
And others springing up and growing; in ships | |
Many new things have now been done, and lately | |
Musicians found out tuneful harmonies. | |
Yes, and the nature and order of this world | 335 |
In recent time has been discovered, and this | |
I now myself the very first am found | |
Able to tell it in our native tongue. | |
But if perchance it may be your belief | |
That all these things existed once before, | |
But that mankind perished in burning fire | |
Or cities fell in some great upheaval of the world, | 340 |
Or tearing rivers fed by endless rains | |
Flooding the country overwhelmed the towns, | |
Why, all the more then you must be convinced | |
That earth and sky themselves will be destroyed. | |
For when such great afflictions, such great perils, | 345 |
Once shook the world, then if some more potent cause | |
More terrible had come upon it, there must have followed | |
Widespread destruction and a mighty fall. | |
And there’s no surer proof of our mortality | |
Than this, that we sicken of the same diseases | |
As those whom nature has recalled from life. | 350 |
Few things there are that last eternally. | |
First, solid bodies that repel assaults, | |
And allow nothing to penetrate them | |
And break apart the close-knit parts within, | |
Such as the atomic particles of matter | |
The nature of which we have described before; | 355 |
Next, things which last through all the length of time | |
Because no blow can hit them; such is the void, | |
Which stays untouched and nothing can ever strike it; | |
Next, things which have no space around them | |
Into which they can dissolve and be dispersed; | 360 |
Such is the eternal sum of the sum of things. | |
Outside it nowhere any place exists | |
Into which its elements can spring away, | |
And nothing exists to impact it or destroy it. | 363 |
But, as I have shown, the world is not composed | |
Of solid body, since void is mixed with things. | 365 |
Nor is it like the void. Nor are there lacking | |
Bodies which from the infinite spring forth | |
And rack this world with violent hurricanes | |
Or bring some other danger and disaster; | |
Nor is there lacking in the depths of space | 370 |
Room for the world’s walls fallen to fly apart; | |
Or they may perish struck by other force. | |
Therefore the door of death is never closed | |
To sky and sun and earth and sea’s deep waters. | |
No. It stands open, and with vast gaping mouth | 375 |
It waits for them. | |
Wherefore you must confess that these same things | |
Have had their birth; for nothing of mortal build | |
Could ever through infinite ages until now | |
Have scorned the mighty power of endless time. | |
Again, since the mighty members of the world | 380 |
So furiously fight among themselves | |
In most unrighteous war, do you not see | |
Some end to their long struggles may be given? | |
Perhaps the sun and universal heat | |
Will overcome, and drink the waters dry, | |
Which is their aim, though not so far achieved, | 385 |
So much the rivers supply and threaten in turn | |
To flood the world from ocean’s deep abyss. | |
In vain. Since winds that sweep across its surface | |
Diminish it, and the sun’s high rays unravel it, | |
Confident that they can dry up everything | 390 |
Before the waters can achieve their end. | |
Such war they breathe in equal combat locked | |
Seeking decision in a mighty cause. | |
Though once meanwhile fire won the victory, | |
And once, so legend tells, water reigned in the fields. | 395 |
For fire was lord, and burnt up all around, | |
When far from his course the Sun’s fierce horses hurled | |
Phaethon through the heavens and o’er the earth. | |
But the almighty sire to anger moved | |
With sudden thunderbolt the aspiring youth | 400 |
Struck from his chariot down to earth. The Sun | |
Meeting his fall, caught up the eternal lamp | |
That lights the world, brought back the scattered horses, | |
Reined them in, trembling, then to their proper courses | |
Guiding them back restored the world again. | |
At least that’s what the old Greek poets sang, | 405 |
And that is very far removed from truth. | |
For fire can triumph when from the infinite | |
The atoms of its matter issue forth | |
In greater mass than usual. And then | |
Either subdued somehow its force declines, | |
Or the world dies, burnt up by scorching blasts. | 410 |
Water likewise began once to prevail, | |
Massing its floods, so legend tells, and many | |
Races of men were overwhelmed; but then | |
That which had massed from out the infinite | |
Turned back, by some compelling force withdrawn, | |
The rains stopped, and the rivers checked their flow. | 415 |
Next in due order I’ll set out the ways | |
In which by assembly of matter were established | |
The earth, the sky, and the vast depths profound | |
Of sea, and courses of the sun and moon. | |
For sure, not by design or intelligence | |
Did primal atoms place themselves in order, | 420 |