Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
In this way we must think that heaven and earth | 665 |
Are from the infinite supplied with all that’s needed | |
For earth to move and quake in sudden shock | |
And the swift whirlwind scour the land and sea, | |
The fires of Etna flow, the sky to flame. | |
For this does happen, and the realms of heaven | 670 |
Are set on fire; and a heavier fall | |
Of rain storms down, when by some chance the atoms | |
Of water have been massed and concentrated. | |
‘But surely this tumultuous conflagration | |
Is much too huge for such an origin.’ | |
Well, any river may appear immense | |
To a man who has never seen a greater one; | 675 |
So does a tree or a man; and everything, | |
When a man has seen no larger, he thinks vast. | |
But all these things, with earth and sea and sky | |
Added together, are as nothing compared | |
With the sum total of the universe. | |
Now, none the less, I shall explain the ways | 680 |
In which the flame excited suddenly | |
Blasts out from Etna’s mighty furnaces. | |
First, the whole mountain is hollow underneath, | |
Supported mostly on caverns in the rock. | |
In all the caves there is both air and wind; | |
For air makes wind when strongly agitated. | 685 |
Now when the wind has grown extremely hot, | |
And heated in fury all the rocks around | |
Wherever it touches, and also the earth, | |
And struck from them hot fires and rushing flames, | |
It rises, and straight through the mountain’s throat | |
Hurls itself upward in a mighty blast. | |
Then far and wide the heat is spread, and wide | 690 |
The fall of ashes; and in darkness thick | |
It rolls its smoke, and all the while throws out | |
Rocks of amazing weight. Beyond a doubt | |
This is the work of wind most turbulent. | |
Besides, for a space of many miles the sea | |
Breaks on the mountain’s roots, sucks back its waves, | 695 |
And from this sea caves spread out underneath | |
Right to the deep throat of the mountain, and through these | |
It cannot be doubted that wind mixed with water | |
Comes in from the open sea and penetrates it | |
Deeply within, thus causing an explosion | |
And upward blast of flame, throwing out rocks | |
And raising everywhere great clouds of sand. | 700 |
For on the topmost summit there are craters, | |
The ‘mixing bowls’ as the Sicilians call them, | |
To which we give the name of throats or mouths. | |
There is also a number of things for which | |
It is not enough to state one cause; we must | |
Consider many, and one of them is right. | |
For example, if from a distance you should see | |
The lifeless body of some man, then all | 705 |
The causes of death you might think well to mention, | |
So that the one true cause of it be named. | |
For though you could not prove that steel or cold | |
Had caused his death, or disease perhaps, or poison, | |
We know quite well that what has happened to him | 710 |
Is something of this kind. And so we shall | |
In many cases argue in this way. | |
The Nile, the river of all Egypt, swells | |
And flows across the fields in summertime, | |
Unique among the rivers of the world. | |
It waters Egypt through midsummer heats, | |
Either because North winds oppose its mouth | 715 |
In summer, which blowing at that time of year | |
Are called Etesian, or ‘seasonal’; | |
These blowing against the stream arrest its flow, | |
And piling up the water fill its banks | |
And hold up its advance; for there’s no doubt | |
That these blasts coming from the Pole’s cold star | 720 |
Do blow against the current of the river. | |
For the great Nile comes from the land of heat, | |
The south, where deep among the race of men | |
Burnt black by sun it rises from the noonday. | |
It may be also that a great sandbar | |
Is heaped against the river’s mouths, confronting the flow | 725 |
When the sea driven strongly by the winds | |
Rolls the sand shorewards. In this way the river | |
Has less freedom of exit, and the current | |
Has a less easy downflow to the sea. | |
Or it may be perhaps that heavier rains | |
Fall on its source at the season of the year | |
When the Etesian breezes of the north | 730 |
Drive all the clouds into those parts together. | |
You may be sure that when they have massed together | |
Driven out towards the region of the noonday | |
There they at length beating against high mountains | |
Are crushed and with great violence compressed. | |
Or deep within the Ethiopian highlands | 735 |
Perhaps the river grows, when the hot sun | |
Traversing all things with his burning rays | |
Makes the white snows run down into the plains. | |
I shall now explain the nature of the lakes | |
And other places that are called Avernian. | |
Firstly, the name Avernian is given | 740 |
Because no birds can live within these places. | |
For any birds that fly directly above them, | |
Their wings’ oars all forgotten and the sails | |
Let loose, and neck all limp and lifeless, | |
Down they fall headlong to the ground, | |
If it so happens that earth lies below, | 745 |
Or into the water, if perchance a lake | |
Of Avernus lies outspread. There is near Cumae | |
A place like this, where the hills filled with sulphur | |
Give off a pungent smoke fed by hot springs. | |
There is another within the walls of Athens | |
Right at the summit of the citadel | |
Hard by the temple of Tritonian Pallas, | 750 |
Where the crows never wing their raucous way, | |
Not even when altars smoke with offerings; | |
Such care they take to flee, not from the anger | |
Of Pallas, as the Greek poets have sung, | |
Because of that fateful vigil; but the nature | |
Of the place itself produces this effect. | 755 |
In Syria also there’s another place | |
Like this, they say, where as soon as quadrupeds | |
Have set foot on it, its natural potency | |
Makes them to fall down flat, as if suddenly | |
Slaughtered in sacrifice to the gods below. | |
But all these things have a natural origin | 760 |
And the causes that produce them are quite clear. | |
Do not believe that in these regions lie | |
The gates of Hell, and that the gods below | |
Down to the shores of Acheron draw thence | |
The souls of men, as the light-footed stags | 765 |
By the breath of their nostrils are often thought to draw | |
The tribes of creeping creatures from their holes. | |
How far removed all that is from the truth | |
Learn now; for of the true facts I try to speak. | |
Firstly I say, as I have often said before, | |
That in the earth are atoms of every kind. | 770 |
Many that are in food bring life; and many | |
Can strike us with disease and hasten death. | |
And I have shown before that substances | |
Vary in their power to support life | |
In different animals, because of their different natures | |
And different textures and atomic shapes. | 775 |
For many noxious elements make their way | |
Through the ears, and many through the nostrils | |
Slip in that are injurious and prickly, | |
And not a few touch tells us to avoid | |
And sight to shun, or taste proclaims them bitter. | 780 |
Next it is plain to see how many things | |
Are violently hostile to the senses, | |
Noisome and dangerous. First certain trees | |
Have shade so dangerous that it brings headache | |
If you should lie outstretched on the grass beneath. | 785 |
And on the great high hills of Helicon | |
There grows a tree whose flower can kill a man | |
By the vile nature of its loathsome scent. | |
And all these things, for sure, rise from the soil | |
Since many seeds of many things Earth holds | |
Mixed up in many ways, then separates and delivers them. | 790 |
A lamp at night is extinguished, and its wick | |
Sends out a pungent smell. If this assails | |
The nostrils of some epileptic, prone | |