Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
Nor did they make contracts, you may be certain, | |
As to what movements each of them should make. | |
But many primal atoms in many ways | |
Moving through infinite time up to the present, | |
Clashing among themselves and carried by their own weight, | |
Have come together in every possible way, | |
Tried every combination that could be made; | 425 |
And so advancing through vast lengths of time, | |
Exploring every union and motion, | |
At length those of them came together | |
Which by a sudden conjunction interfused | |
Often become the beginnings of great things— | 430 |
Of earth and sea and sky and living creatures. | |
Then not the sun’s great wheel with bounteous light | |
Soaring aloft was seen, nor stars of heaven, | |
Nor sea nor sky nor earth at all nor air | |
Nor aught like things that in our world we know, | 435 |
But a strange storm and surging mighty mass | |
Of atoms of all kinds in conflict locked | |
Created turmoil, in their intervals | |
Connections, courses, weights, blows, meetings, motions, | |
Because by reason of their different shapes and patterns | 440 |
They could not all when joined together remain so, | |
Nor make the movements needed for their union. | |
Then parts began to separate, like things | |
Joining with like, and parcel out the world, | |
Fashion its limbs, set out its mighty parts— | 445 |
That is, to set apart high heaven from earth, | |
And the sea apart, spreading its separate waters, | |
And apart too the pure and separate fires of ether. | |
In the first place, all the particles of earth, | |
Being heavy and entangled, came together | 450 |
In the middle, and took the lowest positions. | |
And the more closely mixed they came together | |
The more they pressed out elements that could make | |
Sea, stars, sun, and moon, and the world’s great walls. | |
For all of these consist of elements | |
More round and smooth and smaller far than those | 455 |
Of earth. First therefore through its porous crust | |
Ether broke out and raised itself aloft, | |
Ether the fire-bringer, and many fires | |
It lightly drew with it. As oft we see | 460 |
With blush of morn the golden sun’s new beams | |
Colour the meadow grasses pearled with dew, | |
And lakes and living streams breathe out a mist, | |
And earth itself appears sometimes to smoke; | |
And then the vapours forming high above | 465 |
Thicken, and weave a web across the sky, | |
So in this way then ether light and thin | |
Thickened, and bent round curving everywhere | |
Expanding everywhere in all directions, | |
And thus fenced in the rest with keen embrace. | 470 |
Next the beginnings came of sun and moon, | |
Whose globes revolve in middle course on high. | |
Them neither earth nor mighty ether claimed, | |
Being not so heavy as to sink and lie | |
Nor light enough to rise through highest heaven, | 475 |
But in between they turn as living bodies | |
And take their place as parts of all the world; | |
As in our bodies too some limbs may stay | |
At rest, while others yet are moving. | |
And now, when these two orbs had been drawn off, | 480 |
Earth suddenly into the wide blue sea | |
Sank down, and filled the ditches with salt floods; | |
And day by day the more the tides of ether | |
And sun’s rays all around beat on the earth, | |
And to its farthest bounds with many blows | 485 |
Compressed it, so that forced towards its centre | |
It became solid, so much then the more | |
The salt sweat pressed out oozing from its body | |
Increased the sea, increased the swimming plains, | |
So much the more slipped out and flew away | |
Those many bodies of heat and air, and far from earth | 490 |
Uplifted filled the shining vault of heaven. | |
The plains subsided and the mountains grew, | |
High mountains, since the rocks could not sink down, | |
Nor all things everywhere sink equally. | |
So in this way earth with its solid weight | 495 |
Stood, and the mud as it were of all the world | |
Flowing down together in a heavy mass | |
Sank to the bottom like the lees of wine. | |
Then sea, then air, then ether fire-bearer | |
All were left pure, of liquid atoms made, | |
Some lighter than others. Liquidest of all, | 500 |
And lightest, ether flows above the air, | |
Nor is its liquid essence e’er disturbed | |
By whirling winds. It lets all things below | |
Be tossed by violent tempests, racked by storms; | |
Itself with motion undisturbed and sure | |
Bearing its own fires keeps its onward way. | 505 |
For that a gentle flow in one direction | |
Is possible for ether, Pontus shows, a sea | |
That flows with an unchanging current, keeping | |
One tide forever moving in its waters. | |
The causes of the motions of the stars | |
Let us now sing. First, if the great orb of heaven | |
Turns round, we must say that air presses on each pole, | 510 |
And holds it from outside and shuts it in; | |
Then, that another air flows above and moves | |
On the same course as roll the signs of heaven | |
And shining stars of the everlasting world; | |
Or else some other air flowing beneath | |
In the opposite direction drives it from below, | 515 |
As we see rivers turning wheels and buckets. | |
It may be also that the whole of heaven | |
Remains at rest, and yet the bright stars move; | |
Whether because swift tides of ether shut in | |
Seeking escape whirl round in circles, and roll | 520 |
Their fires through all the thundering realms of heaven; | |
Or some air flowing from some place outside | |
Turns and drives fires; or perhaps of their own accord | |
They wind where food invites them, fiery bodies | |
Grazing the starry pastures of the sky. | 525 |
Which of these causes operates in this world | |
It is difficult to say beyond all doubt; | |
But what can and does happen in the universe | |
In various worlds created in various ways | |
That do I teach, and set out several causes | |
That may apply to the movements of the stars | 530 |
Throughout the universe; and one of these | |
Must certainly within this world of ours | |
Excite the movements of the constellations; | |
But to lay down which it is, is not for one | |
With stumbling footsteps moving slowly forward. | |
Now earth rests in the centre of the world. | |
This is because its mass slowly reduces | 535 |
And vanishes, and underneath is joined | |
Another substance, joined when its life began, | |
Fitted and grafted into the regions of air | |
In which it lives, and for that very reason | |
It is no burden and does not depress the air. | |
A man’s limbs have no weight that he can feel, | 540 |
The head’s no burden to the neck, nor body | |
For all its size weighs heavy on our feet. | |
But heavy things striking us from outside | |
Cause injury, though they be very much smaller. | |
So much it matters what each thing can do. | 545 |
In the same way, earth was not suddenly | |
Imposed on air as something alien, | |
Or from outside thrust in on alien air, | |
But from the first beginning of the world | |
It was conceived and grew together with it, | |
A fixed part of it, as limbs are of our body. | |
Besides, when earth by sudden mighty thunder | 550 |
Is struck, it shakes all the air that lies above. | |
This it could never do, were it not bound | |
To the world’s airy regions and to the sky. | |
By common roots united and conjoined, | |
Joined when their lives began, they cling together. | 555 |
See also how a most thin essence of spirit | |
Sustains our body, despite its heavy weight | |
Because it is so conjoined and united with it. | |
And what can lift the body in a leap | |
If not the force of spirit that guides the limbs? | 560 |
Now do you see how great the power can be | |
Of a thin substance joined with heavy body, | |
As air is joined with earth, and mind with us? | |