Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
So everything is full of winds and fires | |
And thunderclaps and lightning everywhere. | 270 |
For indeed I have shown above that hollow clouds | |
Must contain very many seeds of fire | |
And must receive many from the sun’s hot rays. | |
Therefore, when the same wind that has driven them | |
Into one place together, has squeezed out | |
Many seeds of fires, and in so doing itself | 275 |
Has intermingled with the fire, the whirlwind | |
Finds its way in, whirls round in the narrow space | |
And in the hot furnace sharpens the thunderbolt. | |
For the wind is kindled in two ways: by the heat | 280 |
Of its own motion, and by contact with the fire. | |
Next when the wind has reached a mighty heat | |
And the strong impulse of the fire has entered, | |
The thunderbolt, now as it were ripe, cleaves through | |
The cloud by a sudden blow, and the heat, shot out, | |
Lights all the place beneath with flashing flames. | |
A deep roar follows, such that the vault of heaven | 285 |
Seems to be sundered apart and falling on us. | |
A violent tremor now assails the earth | |
And murmurs roll about the sky; for then | |
Almost the whole storm quivers with the shock | |
And roars and crashes. Rain then, heavy and full, | 290 |
Follows the shock, so that the whole ether | |
Seems to be turned to rain, and teeming down | |
Recalls again the universal Flood. | |
So much the bursting cloud and raging wind | |
Pour out when the sound flies from the flaming stroke. | |
Sometimes also a powerful wind outside | 295 |
Falls on a cloud pregnant with a ripe thunderbolt. | |
It bursts it, and at once that fiery whirlwind falls | |
Which we name thunderbolt in our native tongue. | |
And this can strike in various directions, | |
Depending on the impulse given to it. | |
Sometimes also a wind that has no fire | 300 |
Kindles nevertheless on its long flight through space; | |
It loses on its course a number of bodies | |
Too large to keep up with it through the air, | |
And scrapes together from the air itself | |
And carries with it other tiny bodies | |
That mixed with it make fire as it flies, | 305 |
In much the same way as a leaden bullet | |
Often grows hot in flight, when throwing off | |
The seeds of cold it catches fire in the air. | |
Sometimes also a blow produces fire, | |
When a cold wind launched without fire has struck. | 310 |
Doubtless because when it has struck a violent blow | |
Elements of heat can flow together | |
Both from the wind itself and at the same time | |
From the object receiving the blow, as fire flies out | |
When stone is struck with iron, and the fire comes | 315 |
No whit the less because the iron is cold. | |
So also a thing must take fire from a thunderbolt | |
If it be fit and suitable for flame. | |
And no wind ever can be utterly | |
And absolutely cold, if from above | 320 |
So powerful a force has driven it. | |
If it has not caught fire on its course, | |
When it arrives it must be warm and mixed with heat. | |
The speed and violent stroke of thunderbolts | |
And the swift fall with which they cleave the sky | |
Have this as their cause: a force within the clouds, | 325 |
First everywhere aroused, accumulating | |
Takes on a mighty energy of movement. | |
Then when the cloud cannot hold the growing impetus | |
The force explodes, and flies with wondrous speed | |
Like missiles hurled from powerful catapults. | |
Moreover, it consists of elements | 330 |
Both small and smooth, so that it is not easy | |
For anything to counter such a substance. | |
For it flies in between and penetrates | |
Through narrow passages, therefore few obstacles | |
Can check it or delay it as it comes; | |
And this is why it falls with flight so swift. | |
Again, while all weights naturally possess | 335 |
A downward momentum, when a blow is added | |
The speed is doubled, and the first impulse | |
Grows heavier, so that with greater speed and strength | |
It shatters whatever delays it on its course. | |
Again, the momentum of its lengthy flight | 340 |
Must give it ever-growing speed, increasing | |
As it falls, and this augments its mighty power | |
And strengthens the blow. It causes all its atoms | |
To move straight forward to a single point | |
And throws them together as they flow into that path. | 345 |
It may perhaps draw from the air itself | |
In the course of its flight certain particles | |
Which by their impact set its speed ablaze. | |
It passes through things without harming them, | |
And leaves many things intact after its transit, | |
Because the fluid fire goes through the pores. | |
And many it transfixes, when its atoms | 350 |
Strike upon other atoms that form a joint. | |
It readily dissolves bronze and in an instant | |
Melts gold, because the atoms of which it is made | |
Are small and smooth and therefore easily | |
Make their way in, and having got in, at once | |
Untie all knots and loosen every bond. | 355 |
In autumn thunder shakes the house of heaven, | |
Studded with shining stars, more often, and shakes the earth, | |
And also when springtime opens with its flowers. | |
For in the cold fires are few, and in the heat | 360 |
The winds fail and clouds are not so thick. | |
So when the season stands between the two | |
Then all the various causes of thunderbolts | |
Combine and flow together in the sky. | |
For then the year’s rough straits mix cold and heat | |
(And a cloud needs both to make a thunderbolt), | 365 |
So discord comes and with a mighty tumult | |
And fire and wind the heavens rage and swell. | |
For the first time of heat is the last of cold, | |
That is the spring. So battle must be joined | |
With fray embroiled between things unalike. | 370 |
And when the last heat mixed with early cold | |
Comes round, to which we give the name of autumn, | |
Here also bitter winter fights with summer. | |
Therefore these must be named the straits of the year, | |
And it’s no wonder if these seasons produce | 375 |
Thunderbolts in abundance, and a whirling storm | |
Forms in the sky, since war everywhere | |
Rocks it on two fronts, on the one side flames | |
And on the other wind and water mixed. | |
Thus the true nature of the thunderbolt | |
Can now be understood, and how it works; | 380 |
Not by unrolling scrolls of Tuscan charms | |
To search in vain the hidden minds of gods | |
And ask them whence the flying fire has come | |
Or to what other quarter of the sky | |
It went, and in what way it penetrated | |
Through walls of buildings, and having worked its will | 385 |
Inside, made its way out again, or ask what harm | |
The stroke of a thunderbolt from heaven can do. | |
If Jupiter and other gods, my friend, | |
Shake with appalling din the realms of heaven, | |
And shoot their fire where each one wants to aim, | |
Why do they not arrange that when a man | 390 |
Is guilty of some abominable crime | |
He’s struck, and from his breast transfixed breathes out | |
Hot flames, a bitter lesson to mankind? | |
Why is a man of conscience free from stain | |
Engulfed in flames, all innocent, suddenly | |
Seized by a fiery whirlwind from the sky? | 395 |
Why do they waste their pains shooting at deserts? | |
Or are they merely practising their aim | |
And strengthening their muscles? Why do they allow | |
The Father’s bolt to be blunted on the ground? | |
Why does he allow this himself, and not keep it | |
For his enemies? And why does Jupiter | |
Never when the sky is cloudless everywhere | 400 |
Launch bolts upon the earth and sound his thunder? | |
Or does he wait until the clouds have formed | |
And then himself descend down into them | |
To aim his weapon from a shorter range? | |
What is his object when he strikes the sea? | |
Has he some grudge against the waves and all | |