Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
When we walk by the sea; and when we watch wormwood | |
Being mixed with water we sense its bitterness. | 930 |
So does from all things always something flow | |
And everywhere into all parts spreads abroad. | |
And no delay nor rest is given this flow | |
Since we constantly feel it, and all things always | |
We can see and smell and hear the sound of them. | 935 |
I now repeat, what my first book made quite clear, | |
That the structure of all objects is most porous. | |
To understand this fact is relevant | |
To many studies, but in none more than this | |
On which I now embark, it is most necessary | 940 |
To establish that all objects which we see | |
Consist of nothing but atoms mixed with void. | |
In the first place, in caves the rocky roofs | |
Sweat moisture out and drip with oozing drops. | |
Sweat likewise oozes out from all our body, | |
The beard grows, and hair on every limb and member. | 945 |
Food is diffused all through the veins, increasing | |
And nourishing the body’s furthest parts | |
Even to the nails. Cold also and warming heat | |
We feel to pass through bronze, we feel them pass | |
Through gold and silver, when we hold full cups. | 950 |
And through the stone dividing walls of houses | |
Voices fly and smells, and cold, and the heat | |
Of fire that even iron penetrates. | |
Again, where the great corselet of the heavens | |
Embraces us, the seeds of clouds fly in, | |
And of disease that comes in from outside. | 955 |
And storms arising from the earth and sky | |
Fall duly back into the sky and earth, | |
Since nothing exists without a porous texture. | |
We add to this that not all particles | |
Thrown off from objects have the same effect | |
Upon the senses, and not all are suited | 960 |
In the same way to influence other things. | |
First, the sun bakes the earth and makes it dry; | |
But ice it melts, and snow upon high mountains | |
Lying deep piled is thawed by its strong rays. | |
And wax placed in its heat is liquefied. | 965 |
Fire likewise makes bronze melt, turns gold to liquid, | |
But skins and flesh it shrivels and contracts. | |
Water hardens iron taken from the fire | |
But skins and flesh it softens when hardened by heat. | |
The bearded goats find the wild olive sweet | 970 |
As if it were truly ambrosia and steeped in nectar, | |
Yet no leaf grows to human taste more bitter. | |
Pigs detest oil of marjoram and fear | |
All kinds of ointments, for to the bristly pig | |
What seems to us refreshing is rank poison. | 975 |
But on the other hand, what is to us | |
Most loathsome filth, why, pigs delight in it | |
And love to roll their bodies in the mud. | |
This still remains, which it seems should be said | |
Before I approach the subject of my theme. | 980 |
Since various different things have many pores | |
They must then be endowed with different natures | |
Each having its nature and its passages. | |
For instance, living beings have different senses | |
And each perceives the object proper to it; | 985 |
By one sense sound comes in, and by another | |
Taste comes from flavour, and to another comes | |
The smell of odours wafting on the air. | |
Besides, one thing is seen to seep through stone, | |
Another through wood, another to pass through gold, | |
Another makes its way through glass or silver. | |
For images pass through glass and heat through silver, | |
And one thing passes through more quickly than another. | |
It is the nature of the passageways | |
That makes this happen, varying as it does | 995 |
In many ways, as I have just explained, | |
For each thing has a different nature and texture. | |
And now, when all these things have been established, | |
And well laid down, prepared and ready for us, | |
It is easy to move on and state the reason | 1000 |
And make plain the cause why iron is attracted. | |
Firstly, there must needs flow out from this stone | |
A multitude of atoms, like a stream, | |
That strikes and cleaves asunder all the air | |
That lies beneath the iron and the stone. | |
Now when this space is emptied, and a large | 1005 |
Tract in the middle is left void, at once | |
The atoms of the iron gliding forward | |
Fall in a mass into the vacuum. | |
So the ring follows, its whole form moving forward. | |
And nothing has its primal elements | |
More closely intertwined and woven together, | 1010 |
More strongly knit, than iron strong and cold. | |
No wonder then if all those atoms of iron | |
Flowing into the void must cause the ring to follow. | |
And this it does, and follows, until it comes | 1015 |
Right to the stone and clings with hidden ties. | |
The same thing happens in all directions. Wherever | |
An empty space is made, the adjacent atoms | |
Whether they are at the sides or are above | |
At once are driven into the vacuum. | |
For they are struck by blows from other quarters | 1020 |
And cannot rise into the air of their own accord. | |
Moreover, to facilitate the process, | |
Another thing occurs to aid the movement: | |
As soon as the air in front of the ring grows thinner, | |
And the space between becomes more void and empty, | 1025 |
At once then all the air at the back of the ring | |
Pushes and drives it forward from behind. | |
For the surrounding air continually | |
Beats on things, but in this case the iron | |
Is driven forward because in one direction | |
There is a vacuum ready to receive it. | 1030 |
This air of which I speak creeps subtly in | |
Through all the many pores within the iron | |
And reaching to its tiny particles | |
Propels it on, as wind drives sails and ship. | |
Moreover, every object must contain air | |
Within its body since the structure is porous, | 1035 |
And air encompasses and bounds them all. | |
Therefore the air which deep within the iron | |
Lies hid, surges continually, and thus | |
Beats on the ring and drives it from within. | |
For certainly the ring is carried forward | 1040 |
On the course on which it has once launched itself | |
By its first plunge into the vacuum. | |
It also happens at times that iron moves | |
Away from this stone, having the tendency | |
To flee and then pursue again in turns. | |
I have even seen Samothracian irons jump, | |
And iron filings in a copper bowl | 1045 |
Go mad with this magnet stone placed underneath, | |
So frantic seem they to escape the stone. | |
That so much discord is created by the copper | |
Set in between is doubtless for this reason: | |
The stream of atoms flowing from the copper | |
Comes first, and occupies the open paths | 1050 |
And passageways that lie inside the iron; | |
Later the stream comes from the stone and finds | |
The iron already quite filled up, and thus | |
No way to swim through as it did before. | |
It is compelled therefore to beat and push | |
The texture of the iron with its waves. | |
So it repels the iron from itself, | |
And working through the copper drives away | |
What otherwise it normally attracts. | 1055 |
In this connection do not be surprised | |
That the stream from this stone has not the power | |
To influence other things as well as iron. | |
Some things stand firm by reason of their weight; | |
Gold is like this, but others being of substance | |
So porous that the stream flies through intact | |
Cannot be set in motion anywhere. | 1060 |
Wood is a good example of this kind. | |
Between the two there lies the nature of iron; | |
When certain atoms of copper have entered it | |
The magnet stones repel it with their flow. | |
These properties are not so different | 1065 |
From others that I could not readily | |
Produce a number of examples showing | |
Things which possess unique affinities. | |
First, only mortar can hold stone together. | |