Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
Driven through the sky, just as, we may be sure, | 135 |
When the strong blasts of the north-west wind | |
Blow through a wood, leaves rustle and branches crack. | |
Sometimes also a furious force of wind | |
Shears through a cloud head on and splits it up. | |
For what the blast can do there, we can tell | |
From our own experience, seeing that here on earth, | |
Where it is gentler, none the less tall trees | 140 |
It overturns and tears up from the roots. | |
And there are waves among the clouds, which make | |
A kind of low roar as they break, as happens | |
Likewise in deep rivers and when the sea | |
Breaks with its rolling tide upon the shore. | |
Thunder comes also when a flaming stroke | 145 |
Of lightning falls from a cloud upon a cloud. | |
If the receiving cloud is full of water | |
It makes a great noise quenching it at once, | |
As red-hot iron taken from the furnace | |
Hisses when plunged into a tank of water. | |
And if a drier cloud receives the fire | 150 |
It lights at once and burns with mighty roar, | |
As on the mountains crowned with laurel came | |
A flame that driven by a whirling wind | |
Burnt all the woodlands with its rushing fire. | |
No other thing than Phoebus’ Delphic laurel | |
Burns with such fearful sound and crackling flame. | 155 |
Lastly, the crack of ice and fall of hail | |
Oft makes a noise in the great clouds on high. | |
For the great mountains of the thunderclouds | |
Are broken, pressed together by the wind, | |
And crushed into a narrow space, and mixed with hail. | |
Lightning occurs likewise when clouds colliding | 160 |
Have struck out many seeds of fire, as stone | |
Strikes stone or iron; then also light leaps out | |
When stone is struck and scatters sparks of fire. | |
Our ears receive the sound of thunder later | |
Than our eyes see the lightning, for this reason; | 165 |
Things always come more slowly to the ears | |
Than to the eyes; as this example shows: | |
If in the distance you observe a man | |
Felling a tall tree with twin-bladed axe | |
You see the stroke before the sound of it | |
Reaches your ears; so also we see lightning | 170 |
Before we hear the thunder, which is produced | |
At the same time as the fire, and by the same cause, | |
Born of the same collision of the clouds. | |
Here is another way in which the clouds | |
Bathe all the landscape in a fleeting light | |
As the storm flashes with its quivering stroke. | |
When wind has entered a cloud and whirling round | 175 |
Has made the cloud condense around the hollow, | |
As I explained before, it becomes hot | |
With its own motion, as you see everything | |
Grows burning hot with motion; leaden bullets | |
Melt as they spin in a long flight through the air. | |
So when the black cloud by the burning wind | 180 |
Has been split up, the sudden violent pressure | |
Makes it shoot out the seeds of heat, and these | |
Produce the winking flashes of bright flame. | |
Then the sound follows, coming to the ears | |
More slowly than the light comes to our eyes. | |
This happens, you must understand, when clouds are thick | 185 |
And are piled high, one cloud upon another, | |
By an amazing force. Don’t be misled | |
Because observing from below we see | |
More easily their wide expanse spread out | |
Than the great mighty mass piled high above. | |
Take note then, when you see clouds like mountains | |
Carried before the winds across the sky, | 190 |
Or when you see them on the mountain tops | |
Piled high, one on another, pressing down | |
And lying still, with all the winds at rest, | |
Then you will recognize their mighty mass, | |
And see great caverns fashioned in them | 195 |
With beetling crags, and when a storm builds up | |
Winds fill them, and imprisoned in the clouds | |
They vent their indignation with a roar, | |
And growl like angry beasts shut up in cages; | |
This way and that they fill the clouds with din, | |
And circle round and round trying to escape; | 200 |
They roll the seeds of fire out of the clouds | |
And mass them together, and in the hollow furnace | |
They spin a circling flame, until at last | |
They burst the cloud, and blaze into the sky. | |
And also there’s another reason why | |
That rushing golden gleam of liquid fire | 205 |
Darts down to earth. It is that the clouds themselves | |
Must contain very many seeds of fire. | |
For when they are entirely free of moisture | |
Mostly their colour is flaming and shining bright. | |
Indeed from the sun’s light they must receive | |
Many such seeds, so with good cause they blush | 210 |
And pour out fires. These therefore, when the wind | |
Has driven them together and compressed them, | |
Squeeze out and then eject the seeds of fire | |
Which make the colours of the lightning-flash. | |
Lightning occurs also when in the sky | |
The clouds are thinning out, for when the wind | 215 |
Gently disperses them as they move on | |
And dissolves them, then the seeds that make the lightning | |
Must fall perforce; but then the lightning comes | |
Noiseless, and without the hideous crash and terror. | |
I now discuss the nature of thunderbolts. | |
This the strokes show, and branding marks of heat, | 220 |
And the holes breathing noxious fumes of sulphur. | |
These are the marks of fire, not wind or rain. | |
Besides, they often set roofs alight, and flame | |
Gains quick dominion all inside the houses. | |
This fire, my friend, the thinnest of all fires, | 225 |
Nature has made of atoms so small and swift | |
That nothing in the world can stand against it. | |
The thunderbolt passes through walls of buildings | |
As sounds and voices do, through stone, through bronze, | |
And in an instant melts both bronze and gold. | 230 |
And wine inside a vessel suddenly | |
It makes evaporate, though the jar remains intact; | |
Doubtless because, as the heat reaches it, | |
It loosens the fabric of the earthenware | |
And makes it porous, then entering the jar | |
It quickly dissolves the atoms of wine and scatters them. | 235 |
And this we see the sun can never do | |
In an age, however strong its flashing heat. | |
So much more mobile and more masterful | |
Is the strong power of the thunderbolt. | |
And now, how they are made and have such power | |
That with a stroke they can split towers asunder, | 240 |
Overturn houses, tear out beams and rafters, | |
Move monuments of men, struck down and shattered, | |
Rob human beings of life and slaughter cattle, | |
And all else of this kind, by what strange power | |
They work, I’ll tell, and delay you no more with promises. | 245 |
We must believe that thunderbolts are made | |
From thick clouds piled up high; they never strike | |
From a clear sky or thin layer of cloud. | |
The facts themselves make clear without a doubt | |
That at a time of thunderstorms clouds mass together | 250 |
Everywhere through the air, so that we think | |
That all the darkness out of Acheron | |
Has filled the mighty caverns of the sky. | |
So dark, beneath the hideous night of cloud, | |
The face of fear hangs over us above, | |
When storm begins to forge the thunderbolts. | 255 |
And very often too across the sea | |
A black cloud falls, like pitch poured from the sky, | |
Loaded with darkness from afar, and draws with it | |
A black storm big with thunderbolts and blasts | |
Filled to the brim itself with wind and fire, | 260 |
So that on land also men shiver and seek shelter. | |
From this we must infer that thunderstorms | |
Stretch high above our heads. For so much blackness | |
Could never overwhelm the earth unless | |
A multitude of clouds piled high on clouds | |
Built up above us, blotting out the sun. | 265 |
Nor could there fall that torrent of the rain | |
That makes the rivers flood and drowns the fields | |
If ether were not full of clouds piled high. | |