Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
The spirit and the nature of the mind. | |
And we must ask ourselves what thing it is | |
That terrifies our minds, confronting us | |
When we are awake but sickened with disease, | |
Or buried in sleep, so that we seem to see | |
And hear in their very presence men who are dead, | |
Whose bones lie in the cold embrace of earth. | 135 |
Nor do I fail to see how hard it is | |
To bring to light in Latin verse the dark | |
Discoveries of the Greeks, especially | |
Because of the poverty of our native tongue, | |
And the novelty of the subjects of my theme. | |
But still your merit, and as I hope, the joy | 140 |
Of our sweet friendship, urge me to any toil | |
And lead me on to watch through nights serene | |
In my long quest for words, for poetry, | |
By which to shine clear light before your mind | |
To let you see into the heart of hidden things. | 145 |
Therefore this terror and darkness of the mind | |
Not by the sun’s rays, nor the bright shafts of day, | |
Must be dispersed, as is most necessary, | |
But by the face of nature and her laws. | |
We start then from her first great principle | |
That nothing ever by divine power comes from nothing. | |
For sure fear holds so much the minds of men | 150 |
Because they see many things happen in earth and sky | |
Of which they can by no means see the causes, | |
And think them to be done by power divine. | |
So when we have seen that nothing can be created | |
From nothing, we shall at once discern more clearly | 155 |
The object of our search, both the source from which each thing | |
Can be created, and the manner in which | |
Things come into being without the aid of gods. | |
For if things came out of nothing, all kinds of things | |
Could be produced from all things. Nothing would need a seed. | 160 |
Men could arise from the sea, and scaly fish | |
From earth, and birds hatch in the sky. | |
Cattle and farm animals and wild beasts of every kind | |
Would fill alike farmlands and wilderness, | |
Breed all mixed up, all origins confused. | |
Nor could the fruits stay constant on the trees, | 165 |
But all would change, all could bear everything. | |
For lacking its own generative bodies | |
How could a thing have a mother, fixed and sure? | |
But as it is, since each thing is created | |
From fixed specific seeds, the source from which | |
It is born and comes forth into the shores of light | |
Is its material and its primal atoms. | 170 |
That is why all things cannot be born of all things, | |
Because in each dwells its distinctive power. | |
And why do roses flourish in the spring | |
And corn in summer’s heat, and grapes in autumn, | |
Unless because each thing that is created | 175 |
Displays itself when at their own due time | |
Fixed seeds of things have flowed together, and the seasons | |
Attend, and safe and sound the quickened earth | |
Brings tender growth up to the shores of light? | |
But if they came from nothing, they’ld spring up | 180 |
Quite suddenly, at uncertain intervals, | |
And wrong times of the year, since primal atoms | |
Would not be there for an unfavourable season | |
To restrain from generative union. | |
Nor would time be needed for the growth of things, | |
For seeds to collect, if they could grow from nothing. | 185 |
For little babes would suddenly be young men | |
And in a trice a tree shoot up from earth. | |
None of this happens, it is plain, because | |
All things grow slowly, as is natural, | |
From a fixed seed, and growing keep their character. | |
So you may know that each thing gets its growth | 190 |
And nourishment from its own material. | |
And add to this that without the year’s fixed rains | |
The earth cannot put forth its gladdening fruits, | |
Nor deprived of food can any animal | |
Beget its kind and keep its life intact. | |
So you may sooner think that many bodies | 195 |
Are common to many things, like letters in words, | |
Than that anything can exist without first beginnings. | |
Again, why could not nature fashion men so huge | |
That they could walk through the sea as across a ford | 200 |
And tear apart great mountains with their hands, | |
And outlive many living generations | |
If not because each thing needs for its birth | |
A fixed material that governs what can arise? | |
So we must admit that nothing can come from nothing, | 205 |
For seed is needed, from which all things created | |
Can spring, and burgeon into air’s soft breezes. | |
Lastly, since we see tilled land is better | |
Than untilled, and the work of hands yields better fruits, | |
It is plain to see that in the ground there lie | 210 |
First elements of things, which when we turn | |
The fertile clods with ploughshare and break up | |
The earth’s good soil, we start to life and growth. | |
But if they were not there, then without our labour | |
You’ld see things grow much better by themselves. | |
The next great principle is this: that nature | 215 |
Resolves all things back into their elements | |
And never reduces anything to nothing. | |
If anything were mortal in all its parts, | |
Anything might suddenly perish, snatched from sight. | |
For no force would be needed to effect | |
Disruptions of its parts and loose its bonds. | 220 |
But as it is, since all things are composed | |
Of everlasting seeds, until some force | |
Has met it, able to shatter it with a blow, | |
Or penetrate its voids and break it up, | |
Nature forbids that anything should perish. | |
And all those things which time through age removes, | 225 |
If utterly by its consuming power | |
All the material of them is destroyed, | |
Whence then does Venus into the light of life | |
Bring back the race of animals, each after its kind, | |
Or, when brought back, whence has the well-skilled earth | |
The power to nourish them and make them grow, | |
Providing food for each after its kind? | |
Whence come the rivers flowing from afar | 230 |
That feed it? Whence does ether feed the stars? | |
For all things mortal must have been consumed | |
By time illimitable and ages past. | |
But if through that length of time, those ages past, | |
Things have existed from which this world of ours | |
Consists and is replenished, then certainly | 235 |
They must be endowed with nature imperishable. | |
Therefore things cannot ever return to nothing. | |
Again, all things alike would be destroyed | |
By the same force and cause, were they not held fast | |
By matter everlasting, fastened together | |
More or less tightly in its framing bonds. | 240 |
A touch would be enough to cause destruction, | |
Since there would be no eternal elements | |
Needing a special force to break them up. | |
But as it is, since the bonds which bind the elements | |
Are various and their matter is everlasting | 245 |
They stay intact, until they meet a force | |
Found strong enough to break their textures down. | |
Therefore no single thing returns to nothing | |
But at its dissolution everything | |
Returns to matter’s primal particles. | |
Lastly, showers perish when father ether | 250 |
Has cast them into the lap of mother earth. | |
But bright crops rise, and branches in the trees | |
Grow green, trees grow and ripe fruit burdens them. | |
Hence food comes for our kind and for wild beasts, | |
Hence we see happy cities flower with children, | 255 |
And leafy woods all singing with young birds, | |
Hence cattle wearied by their swollen weight | |
Lie down across rich pastures, and the white milky stream | |
Flows from their udders. Hence the young progeny | |
Frisk with weak limbs on the soft grass, their youthful minds | 260 |
Intoxicated by the strong fresh milk. | |
Therefore all things we see do not utterly perish | |
Since nature makes good one thing from another, | |
And does not suffer anything to be born | |
Unless it is aided by another’s death. | |