Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
The sun’s heat and its size can hardly be | |
Much greater or less than is perceived by our senses. | 565 |
Though great the distances through which its fires | |
Throw light, and breathe warm air upon our limbs, | |
The heat is not lessened by these intervals | |
Nor is the fire made smaller to our vision; | |
Therefore since the sun’s heat and light outpoured | 570 |
Reach to our senses and shine everywhere, | |
The shape and size of the sun can so truly be seen | |
That nothing need be added or taken away. | |
The moon too, whether it shines with borrowed light | 575 |
Illumining the world, or whether it sends | |
Its own light from its own body, whichever it is, | |
Its size, as it moves through the heavens, is no larger | |
Than it appears to our eyes as we see it. | |
For all things which we see at a great distance | |
Through large expanse of air have outlines blurred | 580 |
Before the bulk is lessened. Therefore the moon, | |
Since it displays a clear face and firm outline, | |
Must, as we see it move on high, possess | |
The same shape and same size as what we see. | |
Lastly, all the fires of ether which we see— | 585 |
Since all the fires that we see here on earth, | |
So long as their flickering is clear and blaze perceived, | |
Appear sometimes to change extremely little | |
In size, however distant they may be— | |
You may be sure that only by a fraction | |
Or by a small and trifling difference, | 590 |
Can they be smaller or larger than what we see. | |
And here’s another thing that need not cause surprise. | |
How does so small a sun so great a light | |
Send out that floods the seas and lands and sky, | |
And fills them and bathes them in its glowing heat? | 595 |
Perhaps from there one spring of all the world | |
Wells forth in bounteous flood and pours out light, | |
Because elements of heat so mass together, | |
Coming from everywhere through all the world, | 600 |
That heat flows out here from one single source. | |
Do you not see how widely a small spring | |
Can water the meadows and flood across the fields? | |
Or it may be that no great heat of sun | |
Can set the air on fire, if it may chance | 605 |
That air is present of a kind that can | |
Be kindled by a small amount of heat, | |
As sometimes we see standing corn or stubble | |
Caught by a single spark blaze everywhere. | |
Perhaps also the sun with rosy lamp | 610 |
Shining on high possesses hidden fires | |
Invisible, all round it, with no radiance marked, | |
And in this way the mighty heat-bearer | |
Increases the force and impact of its rays. | |
Nor does a straight and simple path lie open | |
To tell us how the sun from its summer heights | 615 |
Sinks down to Capricorn in winter, then coming back | |
Turns to its goal again of Cancer’s solstice; | |
Nor how the moon traverses month by month | |
The space which the sun takes a full year to travel. | |
These things, I say, can be given no single cause. | 620 |
One of the most likely explanations | |
Is that put forward by Democritus, | |
Divine philosopher. In his opinion | |
The nearer the heavenly bodies are to earth | |
The less the whirling of the sky can move them; | |
For its violent and rapid force grows less | 625 |
And fades away lower down, and so the sun | |
Together with the signs that follow it | |
Is gradually left behind, because its path | |
Is so much lower than that of the burning stars. | |
And still more so the moon: its course is lower, | |
And the further it is from the sky and the nearer to earth | 630 |
So much the less it can keep up with the signs. | |
And as the whirling movement carrying it | |
Is weaker, since it is lower than the sun, | |
So much the sooner do the constellations | |
Catch up with it all round and pass it by. | |
It seems to travel back more quickly to them | 635 |
Because in fact they catch up faster on it. | |
It is possible also that two currents of air | |
Blow across the world in opposite directions, | |
Alternately, each at fixed intervals; | |
One driving the sun down from its summer signs | |
To the winter turning point of frost and ice, | 640 |
One throwing it back out of the cold and dark | |
To regions of heat and to the burning stars. | |
In the same way we must think that the moon | |
And the stars which turn for great years in great orbits | |
May be driven by alternate currents of air. | 645 |
You see how clouds driven by opposing winds | |
Move in opposite directions, one above another. | |
Why should the stars not through the mighty orbits | |
Of ether be carried by opposing tides? | |
Night with vast darkness overwhelms the earth | 650 |
Either because the sun on its long course | |
Has reached the farthest limits of the sky, | |
And faint and weary has breathed out its fires | |
Worn by the journey and weakened by much air, | |
Or else it is driven to turn beneath the earth | |
By the same force that carried it above. | 655 |
At a fixed time also Matuta spreads | |
Her rosy dawn abroad through ether’s shores | |
And flings wide the light of day; either because | |
The sun returning from beneath the earth | |
Comes up and tries to set the sky on fire, | |
Or because fires and many seeds of heat | 660 |
At a fixed time combine and mass together | |
And make each day a newborn sun to shine. | |
So it is said from Ida’s mountain peaks | |
At daybreak in the East strange fires are seen | |
Scattered along the morning’s rim, which mass | |
As it were into a ball and form an orb. | 665 |
Nor is it anything miraculous | |
That at so fixed a time these seeds of fire | |
Combine to make anew the sun’s bright rays. | |
For we see many things that come to pass | |
At a fixed time everywhere. At a fixed time | |
Trees bloom, at a fixed time flowers fall, | 670 |
At a fixed time no less does age command | |
The teeth to fall, brings the soft growth of down | |
On face of ripening youth and bids the beard | |
Come down in equal length on manly cheek. | |
And lightning too and snow, rains, clouds, and winds, | 675 |
These mostly come at fixed times of the year. | |
For since the causes from the first beginning | |
Were of this nature, and from the world’s origin | |
Things happened in this way, in sequence then | |
And order fixed they even now recur. | |
Days may grow longer and nights melt away | 680 |
And daylight lessen as the nights increase | |
For various reasons. It may be that the sun | |
Running below and then above the earth | |
Moves through the ether in unequal curves | |
Dividing its orbit into unequal parts, | |
And what from one point it has taken away | 685 |
It adds to the other on its journey back, | |
Until it comes to that great sign in heaven | |
Where the two knotted circles of the year | |
Equate the shades of night with light of day. | |
For in mid-course between the mighty blasts | |
Of North wind and of South the sky maintains | |
Its turning points at equal distances, | 690 |
Obeying the pattern of the zodiac | |
Through which the sun creeps on its yearly course | |
Shining obliquely upon earth and sky. | |
So they declare who have mapped out all the parts | |
Of heaven and marked the signs in their due places. | 695 |
Or perhaps the air is thicker in certain parts | |
So that below the earth the trembling gleam | |
Of fire delays and cannot easily | |
Pass through and so come forth into its rising. | |
And therefore the long winter nights drag on | |
Until the radiant banner of day appears. | 700 |
Or again, the truth may lie with those who say | |
That in alternate seasons of the year | |
Slower or quicker flow together the fires | |
That cause the sun to rise in its due place. | |
Let us now consider the moon. Perhaps it shines | 705 |
Because the sun’s rays strike it, day by day | |