Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
Full of windy caves; and many lakes and pools | |
She bears in her bosom, and rocks and beetling cliffs, | |
And many hidden rivers beneath earth’s back | 540 |
Roll their rough currents over sunken rocks. | |
For the facts themselves require that everywhere | |
Earth should be like herself, above and below. | |
With these things therefore joined to it below | |
And placed beneath it, earth trembles with the shock | |
Of vast collapse and ruin when age and time | 545 |
Have undermined the mighty caves below. | |
Whole mountains fall, and from the mighty shock | |
Tremors spread abroad in an instant far and wide; | |
Quite naturally, since buildings by the roadside | |
Tremble with the shock of waggons passing by | |
Of no great weight, and jump when the iron-shod wheels | 550 |
On either side jolt over stones or potholes. | |
And sometimes also when some enormous lump | |
Weakened by time rolls forward from the earth | |
Into some huge wide pool, the earth itself | |
Sways shaken by the wave of water, as a jar | 555 |
Sometimes cannot stand still unless the water | |
Inside has stopped from moving to and fro. | |
Besides, when through the hollows below the earth | |
A wind collects, and thrusting in one direction | |
Bears down and drives into the lofty caverns, | |
The earth leans under the impact of the wind. | 560 |
The houses that are built up on the earth, | |
And all the more the more they tower to heaven, | |
Lean dangerously, bulging and pushing forward | |
In the same direction, and the beams askew | |
Hang in the air projecting, ready to go. | |
And yet men fear to believe that the great world | 565 |
Has waiting for it some disastrous hour | |
Of ruin and destruction, though they see | |
So great and mighty a mass of earth lean over! | |
And yet unless the winds abate, no power | |
Could curb the world’s rush to ruin and hold it back. | |
But since in fact the winds alternately | 570 |
Abate and gather strength, and as it were | |
Collect their forces and rally, and then retreat | |
Repulsed again, more often for this reason | |
Earth threatens to fall than it actually does fall. | |
For it leans forward and then again springs back, | |
And after falling forward it recovers | |
Its proper place and stands in balance again. | |
This is how all buildings totter, the top | 575 |
More than the middle, the middle more than the base; | |
The base itself is hardly moved at all. | |
These mighty tremors have another cause. | |
When wind and some great sudden force of air | |
Either from outside or within the earth itself | |
Has hurled itself into earth’s hollow places | 580 |
And there, inside the mighty caverns, first it roars | |
Tumultuously and rushes whirling round, | |
Then with its violence intensified | |
And agitated, out it bursts, and cleaves | |
Earth to its depths and makes a mighty chasm. | |
This is what happened at Sidon in Syria | 585 |
And Aegeum in the Peloponnese. Both cities | |
Were rocked and torn by such an issue of air, | |
And demolished by the earthquake that took place. | |
And many another city wall has fallen | |
By mighty movements of the earth, and many | |
Cities of men with all their citizens | |
Have sunk down to the bottom of the sea. | 590 |
But if no burst occurs, yet the strong wind | |
And violent force of air is disturbed | |
Through all the many passages of the earth, | |
Like a shudder, and this creates the tremor, | |
Just as when cold comes deep into our limbs | |
It shakes them and makes them tremble against their will. | 595 |
So in their cities men are disquieted | |
By twofold terror: they fear the houses above, | |
They dread the caverns beneath, lest suddenly | |
Earth fling them open, or splitting wide apart | |
With gaping jaws create a mighty chasm | |
And fill it with the ruins it has made. | 600 |
Therefore let them believe, however they please, | |
That earth and sky are incorruptible | |
And stand destined to everlasting life, | |
Yet sometimes comes a very present danger | |
To stab them with the fear that suddenly | |
Earth may withdraw beneath their feet and fall | 605 |
Into the abyss, and all the sum of things | |
Follow in total collapse, and then may come | |
The ruin and confusion of the world. | |
Some people wonder that nature does not cause | |
The sea to increase in size, since into it | |
Runs down so great a flow of water, and since the rivers | |
All flow into it from every part of the globe. | 610 |
And add the wandering showers and flying storms | |
That spatter and water every land and sea; | |
Add too the sea’s own springs; yet all of these | |
Compared to the sea’s great mass will scarcely equal | |
The addition to it of a single drop. | |
This makes it then the less a matter for wonder | |
That the great sea does not grow greater still. | 615 |
The sun’s heat also draws a great part off. | |
For certainly we see clothes dripping with water | |
Dried by the strong rays of the burning sun. | |
But seas are many, and spread wide below; | |
Therefore, however small a part the sun | 620 |
May sip from off the surface of the sea | |
In any single place, yet from that vast expanse | |
Abundant store of water is drawn off. | |
Also much water may be taken up | |
By winds that sweep the surface of the sea, | |
Since very often in a single night | 625 |
We see the roads dry out and the soft mud | |
Form into hard crusts all along the way. | |
Besides, I have shown that clouds also lift off | |
A mass of moisture from the ocean’s surface | |
Which on the whole world everywhere they sprinkle | |
When rains fall on the earth and wind drives the clouds. | 630 |
Last, since the earth is of a porous texture, | |
And everywhere, joined closely to the sea, | |
Encompasses its shores on every side, | |
Then, just as water comes from land to sea, | |
So it must ooze from the salt sea into the earth. | |
The brine is filtered off, and the mass of water | 635 |
Oozes back and joins the rivers at their source, | |
And thence in a column of sweet water | |
Over the ground it flows, along the path | |
Once cut by liquid foot to guide the waters. | |
And now the fires that from Mount Etna’s throat | |
Breathe out at times in such a furious storm | 640 |
I shall explain. No ordinary disaster | |
The flaming tempest wrought that reigned supreme | |
Over the fields of Sicily, and neighbouring nations | |
Looked on it with amaze, as all the heavens | |
Filled with black smoke and flashing flames of fire | |
They saw, and trembled, wondering in fear | 645 |
What new things nature might be forging for the world. | |
These things, my friend, with vision wide and deep | |
Must be surveyed, and in every part descried. | |
You must remember that the sum of things | |
Is deep beyond all telling. You must see | 650 |
How small a part, how infinitesimal, | |
Our world is of the total universe, | |
A part less large than just one single man | |
Is of the whole great earth on which he lives. | |
If you will keep this firmly in your mind, | |
And clearly comprehend and clearly see it, | |
There are many things at which you’ll cease to wonder. | |
For is there anyone that feels surprise | 655 |
If fever rising with its burning fire | |
Attacks the limbs, or if some other pain | |
Afflicts the body, caused by some disease? | |
The foot swells suddenly; sometimes a stab of pain | |
Shoots into the teeth or even into the eyes. | |
The fiery rash breaks out, creeping over the body, | 660 |
And burns whatever part it seizes on, | |
Crawling relentlessly across the limbs. | |
All this is caused by the multitude of atoms; | |
For sure this earth and sky of ours contain | |
Sufficient store of noxious disease | |
To spawn a growth of ills immeasurable. | |