Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
Something more lovely, pleases most of all, | |
And seems the best; till afterwards some new | |
And better thing is found which spoils and mars | |
What was before, and blunts the taste for it. | 1415 |
So acorns fell from favour. So the beds | |
Of piled up leaves and herbage were abandoned. | |
So wild beasts’ skins for clothing were despised. | |
And yet this form of dress when first discovered | |
Was I think so much envied that the wearer | 1420 |
Was murdered for it, and then the coat of skins | |
Was torn to pieces by men fighting for it | |
And stained with blood and lost, no use at all. | |
So skins in those days, gold and purple now, | |
Distract men’s lives and weary them with war. | |
And blame for this I think lies in ourselves. | 1425 |
For lacking skins the naked sons of earth | |
Were tortured by the cold; but we no harm | |
Can suffer from a lack of purple robes | |
With stars of gold emblazoned, so we have | |
Some commonplace attire to cover us. | |
Therefore always in vain and uselessly | 1430 |
Men labour, and waste their days in empty cares, | |
Because they fail to see what bounds are set | |
To getting, and what limits to true pleasure. | |
And gradually this evil discontent | |
Has carried life quite out to sea, and from | |
The depths has roused the mighty tides of war. | 1435 |
But sun and moon the watchmen of the world | |
Circling with light the vast rotating vault | |
Have taught men well that seasons of the year | |
Revolve, and that in all things is established | |
A pattern and order fixed which governs them. | |
Men lived already fenced in with strong towers, | 1440 |
And a land split up and parcelled out, | |
And ships with flying sails bedecked the sea, | |
And they had friends and allies bound by treaties, | |
And poets began to celebrate in verse | |
The mighty deeds of old; but letters then | |
Had been not long discovered. Therefore our age | 1445 |
Cannot look back to see those early things | |
Except where reason may point out the traces. | |
Seafaring and farming, city walls, and laws | |
And arms, roads, clothing, and all such other things, | |
All the rewards, all the delights of life, | 1450 |
Songs, pictures, statues curiously wrought, | |
All these they learnt by practice gradually | |
And by experiments of eager minds | |
As step by step they made their forward way. | |
So each thing in its turn by slow degrees | |
Time doth bring forward to the lives of men, | |
And reason lifts it to the light of day. | 1455 |
For as one concept followed on another | |
Men saw it form and brighten in their minds | |
Till by their arts they scaled the highest peak. | 1457 |
Athens of glorious name in former days | |
First brought corn-bearing crops to suffering mortals, | |
Brought them new life, established laws for them, | |
And Athens first sweet solace gave to life | |
When she brought forth a man of genius | 5 |
Who from his lips revealed the truth of things. | |
His glory, though he be dead, from ancient times | |
For his divine discoveries so far renowned, | |
Is even now exalted to the skies. | |
For when he saw that nearly all those things | |
Which need demands for living were enjoyed | 10 |
By mortal men, their life established safe | |
So far as might be, and when he saw them flourish | |
With all that wealth and praise and honour bring, | |
And glorying in the fair fame of their sons, | |
And saw no less that deep in every home | |
Were aching hearts and torments of the mind | |
All hapless, self-inflicted without pause, | 15 |
And sorrows breeding furious laments, | |
He understood then that the vessel itself | |
Produced the flaw, and by this flaw corrupted | |
All that came into it however lovely. | |
He saw that it must leak, being riddled with holes, | 20 |
And so could not by any means be filled. | |
He saw that, as it were with a noisome flavour, | |
It tainted everything that entered it. | |
Therefore with words of truth he purged men’s hearts | |
And set a limit to desire and fear. | 25 |
He showed the nature of that highest good | |
For which all mankind strives, and showed the way, | |
The strait and narrow path which leads to it | |
If we go forward with unswerving steps. | |
He showed the evil in the lives of men | 30 |
Flying far and wide, caused either by natural chance | |
Or else by force, as nature so ordained. | |
He showed the sally-ports within the walls | |
From which each different attack could best be met. | |
He proved that mankind mostly without cause | |
Stirred up sad waves of care within their breasts. | |
For we, like children frightened of the dark, | |
Are sometimes frightened in the light—of things | 35 |
No more to be feared than fears that in the dark | |
Distress a child, thinking they may come true. | |
Therefore this terror and darkness of the mind | |
Not by the sun’s rays, nor the bright shafts of day, | |
Must be dispersed, as is most necessary, | |
But by the face of nature and her laws. | |
So all the more I press on to complete | 40 |
The woven fabric of my argument. | |
I have shown that all the realms of the universe | |
Are mortal, and that the substance of the heavens | |
Had birth; and I have explained most of those things | |
That in the heavens occur and must occur. | 45 |
Please listen now to what remains to tell. | |
Since I have dared to mount the Muses’ glorious chariot, | |
I will now tell how storms of wind arise, | |
And then are calmed again, so that all things | |
Return to what they were, all fury spent; | |
And all those other things in earth and sky | 50 |
Which men observe, and tremble, wondering, | |
Their hearts laid low through fear of gods, oppressed, | |
Crushed down to earth, because their ignorance | |
Of causes makes them yield to power divine | |
Kingdom and Empire over all that is. | 55 |
For men who have been well taught about the gods | |
That they live free from care, may wonder still | |
By what design the world goes on, not least | 60 |
Those things they see in heaven above their heads; | |
And then to the old religions back they turn, | |
And cleave to cruel masters whom they think, | |
Unhappy fools, to be all-powerful, | |
Not knowing what can be and what cannot, | 65 |
Not knowing in a word how everything | |
Has finite power and deep-set boundary stone. | |
So all the more by blindness of the mind | |
They are driven astray, and wander in the dark. | |
Unless you spew these notions from your mind | |
And banish far away from you all thoughts | |
Unworthy of the gods and alien to their peace, | |
These holy powers, objects of your insults, | 70 |
Will often do you mischief. Not because | |
The majesty of the eternal gods | |
Can suffer injury, so that in wrath they seek | |
To wreak revenge. No. You yourself will picture | |
Those quiet beings in their untroubled peace | |
As tossed by violent waves of wrath, and be unable | |
To come before their shrines with quiet mind; | 75 |
And those sweet images which to men’s hearts | |
Are borne from holy bodies, messengers | |
Of form divine, these images no more | |
Will come to you, your heart at peace and tranquil. | |
What kind of life must follow is plain enough. | |
That such a life by truest reasoning | 80 |
May be banished far from us, though many words | |
I have uttered, much remains to tell, adorned | |
In polished verse. The order of the heavens | |
And visage of the sky must be my theme | |
And storm and lightning flash must be my song, | |
Both what they do and from what cause they spring; | 85 |
Lest senselessly you tremble at the sky | |
Divided into parts and speculate | |
Which one the flying fire came from or to which other | |
It went, and in what way it penetrated | |
Through walls of buildings, and having worked its will | |
Inside, made its way out again and so away. | 90 |
Calliope, most skilful of the Muses, | |
Solace of men, delight of gods, do you | |
Now go before me as the last lap I run | |
And point the way to the white winning post | |
Marked out for me, that led by you renown | |
May greet me as I win the victor’s crown. | 95 |
First, thunder shakes the blue expanse of sky | |
Because clouds flying high across the ether | |
Are dashed together by conflicting winds. | |
For no sound comes from a clear sky, but where | |
The clouds in close formation are deployed | 100 |
Often the mighty crash of thunder rolls. | |
Besides, the substance of the clouds can’t be | |
As thick as that of stones or logs, nor yet | |
As thin as that of mist or flying smoke. | |
For either they must fall, by their dead weight | 105 |
Dragged down, like stones, or like smoke they’ld be too thin | |
To contain freezing snow or showers of hail. | |
Above the levels of the world outspread | |
They make a noise like that of awnings stretched | |
Across the beams of some great theatre | 110 |
That flap and crack under the riotous winds | |
And split and break and make the crackling sound | |
Of tearing paper (for that kind of sound | |
Also you can detect in thunderstorms). | |
Or as when clothing hanging on a line | |
Or sheets of paper whirling in the wind | |
Are slapped and beaten by the sudden gusts. | 115 |
Sometimes it happens also that the clouds | |
Cannot meet front to front, but scrape each other | |
Along the sides, moving in opposite directions, | |
And then that dry sound comes which on the ears | |
Grates, long drawn out, until they make their exit | |
Out of close quarters and move free in the sky. | 120 |
Another way by which a thunderstorm | |
Has seemed to make the whole earth quake and tremble, | |
By which in sudden shock the mighty walls | |
Of the embracing firmament have seemed | |
To leap apart, is when a sudden gale | |
Of strong winds massed together has thrust its way | |
Into the clouds, and there enclosed in them | 125 |
With whirling motion everywhere has scooped out | |
An ever-growing hollow, with a shell | |
Of cloud all round compacted more and more; | |
Then when the force and impulse of the wind | |
Has weakened it, the cloud is torn, and splits, | |
Exploding with a terrifying crash. | |
No wonder: since a small bladder full of air | 130 |
Makes such a loud noise when it suddenly bursts. | |
Another way that clouds produce a noise | |
Is when winds blow through them. We often see | |
Clouds branching out in many ways and tattered | |