Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
The liquid mass of water and swimming plains? | 405 |
And if he wants us to beware the stroke | |
Why is he loth to let us see it coming? | |
But if he wants to crush us unawares | |
Why does he thunder from the same direction | |
And put us on our guard? Why does he first | |
Summon the darkness, with its roars and growls? | 410 |
And can you possibly believe he shoots | |
In many directions simultaneously? | |
Or would you dare to say this never happens, | |
Never many strikes at the same time? | |
In fact this often occurs, and it must be | |
That just as rain-showers fall in many places | 415 |
So at one time fall many thunderbolts. | |
Lastly, why does he wreck the holy shrines of gods | |
And his own glorious habitations | |
With hostile thunderbolt? Why does he smash | |
The noble images of gods, and dishonour | |
His own fine statues with a violent wound? | 420 |
Why does he mostly strike high ground, why do we see | |
The signs of fire most often on the mountain tops? | |
From what has been said, it is easy to understand | |
Those whirlwinds which the Greeks name from their nature | |
Presters, and how they come from above into the sea. | 425 |
It sometimes happens that a kind of column | |
Is let down from the sky into the sea. | |
The waters boil round it, lashed by furious winds, | |
And any ships caught in this mighty tumult | |
Find themselves storm-tossed, in the greatest danger. | 430 |
This happens when sometimes a powerful wind | |
Starts to break up a cloud, but cannot do it; | |
It then depresses it, and it becomes | |
Like a column let down from the sky into the sea, | |
Slowly, as though a fist thrust by an arm | |
Were pushing something down, and spreading it | 435 |
Into the waves; then when the wind has burst it | |
It rushes out upon the sea, and makes | |
A wondrous boiling in the waves below. | |
For the whirlwind turns as it comes down, and brings | |
The cloud down with it, a soft and yielding body. | |
But as soon as it has thrust the teeming cloud | 440 |
Down to the ocean’s surface, then at once | |
The whirlwind plunges into the water and stirs up | |
The sea all round and makes it boil and roar. | |
Sometimes a whirlwind wraps itself in a cloud | |
Scraping together seeds of cloud from the air, | |
And behaves like a prester let down from the sky. | 445 |
When this has reached the earth and broken up | |
It vomits out a monstrous violence | |
Of mighty whirling wind and rushing storm. | |
But since this occurs quite rarely, and on land | |
The view of it must often be blocked by mountains, | |
It is seen most frequently upon the sea | |
With its wide prospect and its open sky. | 450 |
Clouds form when in the expanse of sky above | |
Many flying atoms come together | |
All at once, and these are rougher, and so although | |
They tangle together lightly, that is enough | |
To hold them firmly fixed and joined together. | |
From these at first small clouds are formed; these then | 455 |
Take hold of one another and band together, | |
Then join and grow, and the winds drive them on | |
Until in time a furious storm builds up. | |
Now let us look at clouds on mountain tops. | |
The closer the crests are neighbours to the heavens, | |
The more from their exalted seats they smoke | 460 |
With the thick darkness of the tawny cloud. | |
This is because when first the clouds are formed, | |
Before the eye can see them, so thin they are, | |
Winds drive and lift them to the mountain tops. | |
At length then, massed together and condensing, | 465 |
They become visible, and appear to rise | |
From the mountains’ very top into the ether. | |
For our own senses and the facts themselves | |
Make evident to us when we climb high mountains | |
That these lofty places are open to the winds. | |
And nature makes a constant stream of atoms | |
To rise up from the surface of the sea, | 470 |
As is shown by clothes that hung out on the shore | |
Grow damp and sticky. This suggests that clouds | |
Also can grow by receiving many atoms | |
That rise up from the ocean’s briny swell, | |
For these possess a similar kind of moisture. | 475 |
Besides, from all rivers and from the earth itself | |
We see mists and vapours rise, which, drawn up from them | |
Like breath, move upwards and fill all the sky | |
With gloom, and gradually as they come together | |
Bring up supplies to the high clouds above. | 480 |
For the heat also of the starry ether | |
Presses down on them from above, condensing them, | |
And weaves a curtain of cloud beneath the blue. | |
Lastly, those atoms which make clouds and storm-rack | |
Sometimes come into our sky from outside. | |
For I have proved that their number is innumerable, | 485 |
And that the sum of space is infinite, | |
And I have shown the great velocity | |
With which the atoms fly, and how in an instant | |
They cover distances beyond all telling. | |
No wonder is it then if storm and darkness | 490 |
Often so swiftly, with great thunderclouds | |
Poised overhanging, cover land and sea, | |
Since everywhere through the channels of the ether | |
And as it were through all the breathing-holes | |
Of the great world around, the atoms are free | |
To make their exits and their entrances. | |
Now let me demonstrate how rainy moisture | 495 |
Condenses in clouds high above, and falls | |
In a shower of rain upon the earth beneath. | |
First you will concede that many atoms of water | |
Rise up together with the clouds themselves | |
From things of every kind, and in this way | |
Both grow together, the clouds and whatever water | 500 |
Is in the clouds, just as our bodies grow | |
Concurrently with the blood and sweat and whatever | |
Moisture there may in fact be in the limbs. | |
Also the clouds often take up a quantity | |
Of sea water, like hanging fleeces of wool, | |
When the winds drive them above the mighty ocean. | 505 |
In a similar way moisture rises to the clouds | |
From every river. And when into the clouds | |
Many atoms of water have in many ways | |
Joined up together, increasing everywhere, | |
The clouds stuffed full strive to discharge the moisture; | |
For two reasons: the wind compresses them, | 510 |
And the clouds themselves, collecting into a mass | |
Larger than usual bear down and press | |
Down from above and make the showers flow out. | |
Besides, when clouds are thinned out by the wind | |
And dissipated by the sun’s heat from above, | |
They send out rainy moisture, and drip, as wax | 515 |
Over a hot fire melts and liquefies. | |
A downpour comes when clouds are strongly pressed | |
By both these forces: by their own mass piled up | |
And by the strong power of the rushing winds. | |
Long and persistent rain occurs when atoms of water | 520 |
Are set in motion in great multitude | |
And clouds on clouds are carried streaming down | |
In universal rainfall everywhere | |
And all the earth smokes and breathes back the moisture. | |
And when the sun amidst the gloomy storm | |
Shines with its rays upon the falling drops | |
From black clouds opposite, then there stand out | 525 |
Amid the clouds the colours of the rainbow. | |
And all those other things that grow above | |
And are created above and collect in the clouds, | |
All, absolutely all of these, snow, wind, | |
Hail, freezing front, and ice’s mighty power, | |
Great hardener of waters, impediment | 530 |
That everywhere reins back the eager rivers— | |
To find these out and picture in your mind | |
How they are all produced and why they are made | |
Is very easy, once you have fully grasped | |
The different natures of their elements. | |
Come now, and learn the causes of earthquakes. | 535 |
First, you must get into your mind that the earth | |
Below us, as above, is everywhere | |