Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
Turning a larger light into our eyes | |
As it moves further from the sun, until | |
Rising on high it sees its setting, and then | |
Right opposite the sun the moon shines full. | |
Then gradually it must needs hide its light | 710 |
Behind it, as it glides nearer to the sun | |
From the opposite region through the zodiac. | |
So they make out that say the moon’s like a ball | |
Moving in an orbit below the sun. | |
Perhaps also the moon has its own light | 715 |
And with it displays its bright shapes as they change. | |
For there may be some other moving body | |
That glides along with it, obstructing it | |
And blocking it in all sorts of ways, | |
Which cannot be seen because it has no light. | |
Or it may be that it rotates like a ball | 720 |
One half of which is filled with brilliant light | |
And as it turns displays a changing shape | |
Until it brings round to our gazing eyes | |
All of the part that is enriched with fire. | |
Then gradually as it turns it bears away | 725 |
The luminous surface of its rounded globe. | |
This do the Babylonian Chaldees | |
Maintain, refuting the astronomers, | |
And trying to prove their art is all in vain. | |
As if each of these contentions might not be true, | |
Or there were any reason why you should dare | |
To embrace one of them rather than another. | 730 |
Lastly, why should not a new moon every day | |
Be created, with fixed phases and fixed shapes, | |
And every single day the new creation | |
Perish, and a new one take its place? | |
That is difficult to explain by reasoning | |
And prove by words, seeing that many things | 735 |
Are created in so fixed and sure an order. | |
Spring comes, and Venus, and Venus’ harbinger | |
Winged Cupid runs in front, in Zephyr’s steps, | |
And mother Flora strews the path before them | |
With choicest scents and colours everywhere. | 740 |
Next follows parching heat and hand in hand | |
Ceres his dusty friend, and Aquilo | |
That blows in summertime across the sea; | |
Next autumn comes and Bacchus’ revel rout; | |
Then follow other seasons, other winds, | |
Volturnus thunderer and Auster armed with lightning. | 745 |
Last winter brings his snows and freezing frost, | |
And cold comes after him with chattering teeth. | |
No marvel then, if at fixed times the moon | |
Is born and at fixed times again destroyed, | |
Seeing that in this world so many things | |
Come into being at so fixed a time. | 750 |
The sun’s eclipses and the moon’s retreats | |
Likewise you must suppose have several causes. | |
For if the moon can cut the sun’s light off | |
From earth, with head on high obstructing it, | |
Blocking its burning rays with its dark orb, | 755 |
Why should we not think that some other body | |
Gliding always without light could do the same? | |
And why should not the sun at a fixed time | |
Be able fainting to lay down its fires | |
And then renew its light, when it has passed | |
Through regions of air hostile to its flames | 760 |
Which can extinguish and destroy its fires? | |
And if the earth in turn can rob the moon | |
Of light and keep the sun subdued below | |
While moon glides monthly through the cone of shadow, | |
Why should not some other body at the same time | 765 |
Be able to travel underneath the moon | |
Or glide above the sun’s great orb, and so | |
Block and cut off its rays and light outpoured? | |
And if the moon shines with its own bright light, | |
Why should it not in a fixed part of the heavens | |
Grow faint as it passes through regions hostile to it? | 770 |
Well now, since the blue firmament on high | |
Has been my theme, and I have explained its working, | |
So that the varying courses of the sun | |
And wanderings of the moon, what force and cause | 775 |
Impels them we can better understand, | |
And in what way their light dies in eclipse | |
And darkness brings o’er unexpecting earth | |
As first they blink and then with open eyes | |
View all again shining with brilliant light, | |
I now return to the childhood of the world | 780 |
And the soft fields of earth, and tell what first | |
Into the shores of light they chose to bring | |
Newborn, and offer to the fickle winds. | |
In the beginning earth gave birth to plants | |
After their kind, and ringed with shining green | |
The hills and plains. The flowering meadows shone | 785 |
With verdure. Then between the various trees | |
A mighty race began, all galloping | |
To be the first to shoot up into the sky. | |
As feathers, hair, and bristles sprout from bodies | |
Of animals four-footed and from birds | |
Strong on the wing, so then the newborn earth | |
First thrust forth herbs and shrubs, and then created | 790 |
The mortal creatures in their generations, | |
Of many kinds from many sources sprung. | |
For animals cannot have fallen from the sky | |
Nor creatures of the land come from salt pools. | |
So it remains that earth does well deserve | |
The name of mother which we give to her, | 795 |
Since from the earth all things have been created. | |
Even now many animals come up from earth | |
Formed by the rains and warm heat of the sun, | |
So it’s no wonder if many and larger ones | |
Sprang and grew up when earth and air were young. | 800 |
First the winged things, the varied race of birds, | |
Were hatched from eggs in springtime, just as now | |
In summer cicadas from their smooth round shells | |
Crawl out in search of sustenance and life. | |
For earth then first gave birth to mortal creatures. | 805 |
In the fields were warmth and moisture everywhere | |
And so wherever a suitable place occurred | |
Wombs would grow, held by roots into the soil; | |
These in maturing time young offspring broke | |
Fleeing from moisture now and seeking air; | 810 |
Then nature opened there the pores of earth | |
And made it from its veins pour out a juice | |
Like milk, as now when a woman has borne a child | |
Her breasts fill with sweet milk since all the force | |
Of nourishment in her flows into the breasts. | 815 |
Earth furnished food for the children, warmth for their clothes, | |
And herbs for bed all covered in soft down. | |
The world when young knew neither freezing cold | |
Nor scorching heat nor furious blasts of wind, | |
For at the same pace all things equally | |
Increase and reach their peak of strength together. | 820 |
Wherefore again and again does earth deserve | |
The name of mother given to her, for she | |
Herself alone created the human race | |
And at an appointed time herself produced | |
All animals that range the mountains wide | |
And fowls of the air in all their varied forms. | 825 |
But since an end must come to all her bearing | |
She ceased, like a woman worn out by old age. | |
For time doth change the nature of the world; | |
One state of things must pass into another; | |
Nothing remains the same. All things move on. | 830 |
All things does nature turn, transform, and change. | |
One thing decays, grows faint and weak with age; | |
Another grows, and is despised no more. | |
So therefore time the whole nature of the world | |
Changes, and one state of the earth yields place to another, | 835 |
So that what it bore before it cannot bear, | |
But can bear what it did not bear before. | |
And many monsters in those days did earth | |
Try to create, most strange in form and aspect, | |
Hermaphrodites, halfway ’twixt man and woman | |
Yet being neither, and cut off from both; | |
And creatures without feet, or bereft of hands, | 840 |
Some dumb and mouthless, some eyeless and blind, | |
Some crippled, all their limbs stuck to their bodies, | |
Unable to do anything, go anywhere, | |
Nor avoid ill nor take what they might need. | |
And other monsters of like kind earth made, | 845 |