Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
Well now, since I have taught that things cannot be created | 265 |
From nothing, nor, once born, be summoned back to nothing, | |
Lest you begin perchance to doubt my words, | |
Because our eyes can’t see first elements, | |
Learn now of things you must yourself admit | |
Exist, and yet remain invisible. | 270 |
The wind, its might aroused, lashes the sea | |
And sinks great ships and tears the clouds apart. | |
With whirling tempest sweeping across the plains | |
It strews them with great trees, the mountain tops | |
It rocks amain with forest-felling blasts, | |
So fierce the howling fury of the gale, | 275 |
So wild and menacing the wind’s deep roar. | |
Therefore for sure there are unseen bodies of wind | |
Which sweep the seas, the lands, the clouds of heaven, | |
With sudden whirlwinds tossing, ravaging. | |
They stream and spread their havoc just as water | 280 |
So soft by nature suddenly bursts out | |
In spate when heavy rains upon the mountains | |
With huge cascades have swollen a mighty flood, | |
Hurling together wreckage from the woods | |
And whole trees too; nor can strong bridges stand | 285 |
The sudden force of water coming on, | |
So swirling with great rains the river rushes | |
With all its mighty strength against the piers. | |
It roars and wrecks and rolls huge rocks beneath its waves | |
And shatters all that stands in front of it. | |
So also must be the motion of the wind | 290 |
When it blasts onward like a rushing river. | |
Wherever it goes it drives on all before it, | |
Sweeps all away with blow on blow, or else | |
In twisting eddy seizes things, and then | |
With rapid whirlwind carries them away. | |
Wherefore again and yet again I say | 295 |
That winds have hidden bodies, since they rival | |
In character and action mighty rivers | |
Possessed of bodies plain for all to see. | |
Consider this too: we smell different odours | |
But never see them coming to our nostrils. | |
We can’t see scorching heat, nor set our eyes | 300 |
On cold, nor can we see the sound of voices. | |
Yet all these things must needs consist of bodies | |
Since they are able to act upon our senses. | |
For nothing can be touched or touch except body. | |
And clothes hung up beside a wave-tossed shore | 305 |
Grow damp, but spread out in the sun they dry. | |
But how the moisture first pervaded them | |
And how it fled the heat, we do not see. | |
The moisture therefore is split up into tiny parts | |
That eyes cannot perceive in any way. | 310 |
Then too, as the sun returns through many years, | |
A ring on a finger wears thin underneath, | |
And dripping water hollows out a stone, | |
And in the fields the curving iron ploughshare | |
Thins imperceptibly, and by men’s feet | |
We see the highways’ pavements worn away. | 315 |
Again, bronze statues by the city gates | |
Show right hands polished thin by frequent touch | |
Of travellers who have greeted them in passing. | |
Thus all these things we see grow less by rubbing, | |
But at each time what particles drop off | 320 |
The grudging nature of our vision stops us seeing. | |
Lastly, whatever time and nature add to things | |
Little by little, causing steady growth, | |
No eyes however keen or strained can see. | |
Nor again when things grow old and waste away, | 325 |
Nor when cliffs overhanging the sea are worn | |
By salt-consuming spray, can you discern | |
What at each moment each of them is losing. | |
Therefore nature works by means of hidden bodies. | |
Yet all things everywhere are not held in packed tight | |
In a mass of body. There is void in things. | 330 |
To grasp this fact will help you in many ways | |
And stop you wandering in doubt and uncertainty | |
About the universe, distrusting what I say. | |
By void I mean intangible empty space. | |
If there were none, in no way could things move. | 335 |
For matter, whose function is to oppose and obstruct, | |
Would at all times be present in all things, | |
So nothing could move forward, because nothing | |
Could ever make a start by yielding to it. | |
But in fact through seas and lands and highest heaven | 340 |
We see before our eyes that many things | |
In many different ways do move; which if there were no void, | |
Would not so much wholly lack their restless movement, | |
But rather could never have been produced at all, | |
Since matter everywhere would have been close-packed and still. | 345 |
And however solid things are thought to be | |
Here is proof that you can see they are really porous. | |
In rocky caverns water oozes through, | |
The whole place weeping with a stream of drops. | |
Food spreads to every part of an animal’s body. | 350 |
Trees grow and in due time put forth their fruits, | |
Because all over them through trunks and branches | |
Right from the deepest roots food makes its way. | |
Sounds pass through walls, and fly into closed buildings, | |
And freezing cold can penetrate to the bones. | 355 |
But if there were no void for bodies to pass through | |
You would not see this happen in any way. | |
Lastly, why do we see some things weigh heavier | |
Than others, though their volume is the same? | |
For if there is as much matter in a ball of wool | 360 |
As there is in lead, the weight must be the same, | |
Since it is the function of matter to press downwards. | |
But void, by contrast, stays forever weightless. | |
Therefore a thing of equal size but lighter | |
Declares itself to have more void inside it, | 365 |
But the heavier by contrast makes proclaim | |
That it has more matter in it and much less of void. | |
Therefore there is beyond doubt admixed with things | |
That which we seek with keen-scented reasoning, | |
That thing to which we give the name of void. | |
And here I must forestall what some imagine, | 370 |
Lest led astray by it you miss the truth. | |
They say that water yields to scaly fish | |
Pressing against it, and opens liquid ways, | |
Because fish as they swim leave space behind them | |
Into which the yielding waves can flow together; | |
And that likewise other things can move about | 375 |
And change their place, though every place is filled. | |
All this is based on reasoning wholly false. | |
For how, I ask you, shall the fish advance | |
Unless the water gives way? And how shall the water | |
Be able to move back when the fish cannot move? | 380 |
Either then all bodies must be deprived of movement, | |
Or we must say that void is mixed with things, | |
So that each can take the initiative in moving. | |
My last point is this: if two moving bodies | |
Collide and then bounce far apart, all the space between them | 385 |
Must be void until it is occupied by air. | |
And however quickly air flows in all round, | |
It cannot at once fill all the vacant space; | |
It must fill first one place and then the next | |
Until it gains possession of the whole. | |
If anyone thinks that when bodies have sprung apart | 390 |
What happens is that the air becomes compressed, | |
He’s wrong; for in this case a void is made | |
That was not there before, and likewise | |
A void is filled which previously existed. | |
Air cannot be compressed in such a way; | 395 |
Nor if it could, could it, I think, without void | |
Shrink into itself and draw its parts together. | |
Wherefore whatever pleas you may advance | |
To prolong your argument, yet in the end | |
You must admit that there is void in things. | |
And many another proof I can adduce | 400 |
To scrape up credit for my arguments. | |
But to a mind keen-scented these small traces | |
Suffice: from them you’ll grasp the rest yourself. | |
As mountain-ranging hounds find by their scent | |
The lair of beast in leafy covert hid | |
Once they have got some traces of its track, | 405 |
So one thing after another you by yourself | |
Will find that you can see, in these researches, | |