<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<h1> OF THE NATURE OF THINGS </h1>
<p><br/></p>
<h2> By Titus Lucretius Carus </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<h3> A Metrical Translation </h3>
<h2> By William Ellery Leonard </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/></p>
<blockquote>
<p><big><b>CONTENTS</b></big></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0001"> <b>BOOK I</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> SUBSTANCE IS ETERNAL </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"> THE VOID </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0004"> NOTHING EXISTS per se EXCEPT ATOMS AND THE
VOID </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0005"> CHARACTER OF THE ATOMS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0006"> CONFUTATION OF OTHER PHILOSOPHERS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0007"> THE INFINITY OF THE UNIVERSE </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0008"> <b>BOOK II</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0009"> PROEM </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0010"> ATOMIC MOTIONS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0011"> ATOMIC FORMS AND THEIR COMBINATIONS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0012"> INFINITE WORLDS </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0013"> <b>BOOK III</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0014"> PROEM </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0015"> NATURE AND COMPOSITION OF THE MIND </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0016"> THE SOUL IS MORTAL </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0017"> FOLLY OF THE FEAR OF DEATH </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0018"> <b>BOOK IV</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0019"> PROEM </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0020"> EXISTENCE AND CHARACTER OF THE IMAGES </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0021"> THE SENSES AND MENTAL PICTURES </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0022"> SOME VITAL FUNCTIONS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0023"> THE PASSION OF LOVE </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0024"> <b>BOOK V</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0025"> PROEM </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0026"> THE WORLD IS NOT ETERNAL </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0027"> ORIGINS OF VEGETABLE AND ANIMAL LIFE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0028"> ORIGINS AND SAVAGE PERIOD OF MANKIND </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0029"> BEGINNINGS OF CIVILIZATION </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0030"> <b>BOOK VI</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0031"> PROEM </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0032"> GREAT METEOROLOGICAL PHENOMENA, ETC. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0033"> THE PLAGUE ATHENS </SPAN></p>
</blockquote>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/><SPAN name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"></SPAN> <br/></p>
<h2> BOOK I </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<p>PROEM</p>
<p>Mother of Rome, delight of Gods and men,<br/>
Dear Venus that beneath the gliding stars<br/>
Makest to teem the many-voyaged main<br/>
And fruitful lands—for all of living things<br/>
Through thee alone are evermore conceived,<br/>
Through thee are risen to visit the great sun—<br/>
Before thee, Goddess, and thy coming on,<br/>
Flee stormy wind and massy cloud away,<br/>
For thee the daedal Earth bears scented flowers,<br/>
For thee waters of the unvexed deep<br/>
Smile, and the hollows of the serene sky<br/>
Glow with diffused radiance for thee!<br/>
For soon as comes the springtime face of day,<br/>
And procreant gales blow from the West unbarred,<br/>
First fowls of air, smit to the heart by thee,<br/>
Foretoken thy approach, O thou Divine,<br/>
And leap the wild herds round the happy fields<br/>
Or swim the bounding torrents. Thus amain,<br/>
Seized with the spell, all creatures follow thee<br/>
Whithersoever thou walkest forth to lead,<br/>
And thence through seas and mountains and swift streams,<br/>
Through leafy homes of birds and greening plains,<br/>
Kindling the lure of love in every breast,<br/>
Thou bringest the eternal generations forth,<br/>
Kind after kind. And since 'tis thou alone<br/>
Guidest the Cosmos, and without thee naught<br/>
Is risen to reach the shining shores of light,<br/>
Nor aught of joyful or of lovely born,<br/>
Thee do I crave co-partner in that verse<br/>
Which I presume on Nature to compose<br/>
For Memmius mine, whom thou hast willed to be<br/>
Peerless in every grace at every hour—<br/>
Wherefore indeed, Divine one, give my words<br/>
Immortal charm. Lull to a timely rest<br/>
O'er sea and land the savage works of war,<br/>
For thou alone hast power with public peace<br/>
To aid mortality; since he who rules<br/>
The savage works of battle, puissant Mars,<br/>
How often to thy bosom flings his strength<br/>
O'ermastered by the eternal wound of love—<br/>
And there, with eyes and full throat backward thrown,<br/>
Gazing, my Goddess, open-mouthed at thee,<br/>
Pastures on love his greedy sight, his breath<br/>
Hanging upon thy lips. Him thus reclined<br/>
Fill with thy holy body, round, above!<br/>
Pour from those lips soft syllables to win<br/>
Peace for the Romans, glorious Lady, peace!<br/>
For in a season troublous to the state<br/>
Neither may I attend this task of mine<br/>
With thought untroubled, nor mid such events<br/>
The illustrious scion of the Memmian house<br/>
Neglect the civic cause.<br/>
<br/>
Whilst human kind<br/>
Throughout the lands lay miserably crushed<br/>
Before all eyes beneath Religion—who<br/>
Would show her head along the region skies,<br/>
Glowering on mortals with her hideous face—<br/>
A Greek it was who first opposing dared<br/>
Raise mortal eyes that terror to withstand,<br/>
Whom nor the fame of Gods nor lightning's stroke<br/>
Nor threatening thunder of the ominous sky<br/>
Abashed; but rather chafed to angry zest<br/>
His dauntless heart to be the first to rend<br/>
The crossbars at the gates of Nature old.<br/>
And thus his will and hardy wisdom won;<br/>
And forward thus he fared afar, beyond<br/>
The flaming ramparts of the world, until<br/>
He wandered the unmeasurable All.<br/>
Whence he to us, a conqueror, reports<br/>
What things can rise to being, what cannot,<br/>
And by what law to each its scope prescribed,<br/>
Its boundary stone that clings so deep in Time.<br/>
Wherefore Religion now is under foot,<br/>
And us his victory now exalts to heaven.<br/>
<br/>
I know how hard it is in Latian verse<br/>
To tell the dark discoveries of the Greeks,<br/>
Chiefly because our pauper-speech must find<br/>
Strange terms to fit the strangeness of the thing;<br/>
Yet worth of thine and the expected joy<br/>
Of thy sweet friendship do persuade me on<br/>
To bear all toil and wake the clear nights through,<br/>
Seeking with what of words and what of song<br/>
I may at last most gloriously uncloud<br/>
For thee the light beyond, wherewith to view<br/>
The core of being at the centre hid.<br/>
And for the rest, summon to judgments true,<br/>
Unbusied ears and singleness of mind<br/>
Withdrawn from cares; lest these my gifts, arranged<br/>
For thee with eager service, thou disdain<br/>
Before thou comprehendest: since for thee<br/>
I prove the supreme law of Gods and sky,<br/>
And the primordial germs of things unfold,<br/>
Whence Nature all creates, and multiplies<br/>
And fosters all, and whither she resolves<br/>
Each in the end when each is overthrown.<br/>
This ultimate stock we have devised to name<br/>
Procreant atoms, matter, seeds of things,<br/>
Or primal bodies, as primal to the world.<br/>
<br/>
I fear perhaps thou deemest that we fare<br/>
An impious road to realms of thought profane;<br/>
But 'tis that same religion oftener far<br/>
Hath bred the foul impieties of men:<br/>
As once at Aulis, the elected chiefs,<br/>
Foremost of heroes, Danaan counsellors,<br/>
Defiled Diana's altar, virgin queen,<br/>
With Agamemnon's daughter, foully slain.<br/>
She felt the chaplet round her maiden locks<br/>
And fillets, fluttering down on either cheek,<br/>
And at the altar marked her grieving sire,<br/>
The priests beside him who concealed the knife,<br/>
And all the folk in tears at sight of her.<br/>
With a dumb terror and a sinking knee<br/>
She dropped; nor might avail her now that first<br/>
'Twas she who gave the king a father's name.<br/>
They raised her up, they bore the trembling girl<br/>
On to the altar—hither led not now<br/>
With solemn rites and hymeneal choir,<br/>
But sinless woman, sinfully foredone,<br/>
A parent felled her on her bridal day,<br/>
Making his child a sacrificial beast<br/>
To give the ships auspicious winds for Troy:<br/>
Such are the crimes to which Religion leads.<br/>
<br/>
And there shall come the time when even thou,<br/>
Forced by the soothsayer's terror-tales, shalt seek<br/>
To break from us. Ah, many a dream even now<br/>
Can they concoct to rout thy plans of life,<br/>
And trouble all thy fortunes with base fears.<br/>
I own with reason: for, if men but knew<br/>
Some fixed end to ills, they would be strong<br/>
By some device unconquered to withstand<br/>
Religions and the menacings of seers.<br/>
But now nor skill nor instrument is theirs,<br/>
Since men must dread eternal pains in death.<br/>
For what the soul may be they do not know,<br/>
Whether 'tis born, or enter in at birth,<br/>
And whether, snatched by death, it die with us,<br/>
Or visit the shadows and the vasty caves<br/>
Of Orcus, or by some divine decree<br/>
Enter the brute herds, as our Ennius sang,<br/>
Who first from lovely Helicon brought down<br/>
A laurel wreath of bright perennial leaves,<br/>
Renowned forever among the Italian clans.<br/>
Yet Ennius too in everlasting verse<br/>
Proclaims those vaults of Acheron to be,<br/>
Though thence, he said, nor souls nor bodies fare,<br/>
But only phantom figures, strangely wan,<br/>
And tells how once from out those regions rose<br/>
Old Homer's ghost to him and shed salt tears<br/>
And with his words unfolded Nature's source.<br/>
Then be it ours with steady mind to clasp<br/>
The purport of the skies—the law behind<br/>
The wandering courses of the sun and moon;<br/>
To scan the powers that speed all life below;<br/>
But most to see with reasonable eyes<br/>
Of what the mind, of what the soul is made,<br/>
And what it is so terrible that breaks<br/>
On us asleep, or waking in disease,<br/>
Until we seem to mark and hear at hand<br/>
Dead men whose bones earth bosomed long ago.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> SUBSTANCE IS ETERNAL </h2>
<p>This terror, then, this darkness of the mind,<br/>
Not sunrise with its flaring spokes of light,<br/>
Nor glittering arrows of morning can disperse,<br/>
But only Nature's aspect and her law,<br/>
Which, teaching us, hath this exordium:<br/>
Nothing from nothing ever yet was born.<br/>
Fear holds dominion over mortality<br/>
Only because, seeing in land and sky<br/>
So much the cause whereof no wise they know,<br/>
Men think Divinities are working there.<br/>
Meantime, when once we know from nothing still<br/>
Nothing can be create, we shall divine<br/>
More clearly what we seek: those elements<br/>
From which alone all things created are,<br/>
And how accomplished by no tool of Gods.<br/>
Suppose all sprang from all things: any kind<br/>
Might take its origin from any thing,<br/>
No fixed seed required. Men from the sea<br/>
Might rise, and from the land the scaly breed,<br/>
And, fowl full fledged come bursting from the sky;<br/>
The horned cattle, the herds and all the wild<br/>
Would haunt with varying offspring tilth and waste;<br/>
Nor would the same fruits keep their olden trees,<br/>
But each might grow from any stock or limb<br/>
By chance and change. Indeed, and were there not<br/>
For each its procreant atoms, could things have<br/>
Each its unalterable mother old?<br/>
But, since produced from fixed seeds are all,<br/>
Each birth goes forth upon the shores of light<br/>
From its own stuff, from its own primal bodies.<br/>
And all from all cannot become, because<br/>
In each resides a secret power its own.<br/>
Again, why see we lavished o'er the lands<br/>
At spring the rose, at summer heat the corn,<br/>
The vines that mellow when the autumn lures,<br/>
If not because the fixed seeds of things<br/>
At their own season must together stream,<br/>
And new creations only be revealed<br/>
When the due times arrive and pregnant earth<br/>
Safely may give unto the shores of light<br/>
Her tender progenies? But if from naught<br/>
Were their becoming, they would spring abroad<br/>
Suddenly, unforeseen, in alien months,<br/>
With no primordial germs, to be preserved<br/>
From procreant unions at an adverse hour.<br/>
Nor on the mingling of the living seeds<br/>
Would space be needed for the growth of things<br/>
Were life an increment of nothing: then<br/>
The tiny babe forthwith would walk a man,<br/>
And from the turf would leap a branching tree—<br/>
Wonders unheard of; for, by Nature, each<br/>
Slowly increases from its lawful seed,<br/>
And through that increase shall conserve its kind.<br/>
Whence take the proof that things enlarge and feed<br/>
From out their proper matter. Thus it comes<br/>
That earth, without her seasons of fixed rains,<br/>
Could bear no produce such as makes us glad,<br/>
And whatsoever lives, if shut from food,<br/>
Prolongs its kind and guards its life no more.<br/>
Thus easier 'tis to hold that many things<br/>
Have primal bodies in common (as we see<br/>
The single letters common to many words)<br/>
Than aught exists without its origins.<br/>
Moreover, why should Nature not prepare<br/>
Men of a bulk to ford the seas afoot,<br/>
Or rend the mighty mountains with their hands,<br/>
Or conquer Time with length of days, if not<br/>
Because for all begotten things abides<br/>
The changeless stuff, and what from that may spring<br/>
Is fixed forevermore? Lastly we see<br/>
How far the tilled surpass the fields untilled<br/>
And to the labour of our hands return<br/>
Their more abounding crops; there are indeed<br/>
Within the earth primordial germs of things,<br/>
Which, as the ploughshare turns the fruitful clods<br/>
And kneads the mould, we quicken into birth.<br/>
Else would ye mark, without all toil of ours,<br/>
Spontaneous generations, fairer forms.<br/>
Confess then, naught from nothing can become,<br/>
Since all must have their seeds, wherefrom to grow,<br/>
Wherefrom to reach the gentle fields of air.<br/>
Hence too it comes that Nature all dissolves<br/>
Into their primal bodies again, and naught<br/>
Perishes ever to annihilation.<br/>
For, were aught mortal in its every part,<br/>
Before our eyes it might be snatched away<br/>
Unto destruction; since no force were needed<br/>
To sunder its members and undo its bands.<br/>
Whereas, of truth, because all things exist,<br/>
With seed imperishable, Nature allows<br/>
Destruction nor collapse of aught, until<br/>
Some outward force may shatter by a blow,<br/>
Or inward craft, entering its hollow cells,<br/>
Dissolve it down. And more than this, if Time,<br/>
That wastes with eld the works along the world,<br/>
Destroy entire, consuming matter all,<br/>
Whence then may Venus back to light of life<br/>
Restore the generations kind by kind?<br/>
Or how, when thus restored, may daedal Earth<br/>
Foster and plenish with her ancient food,<br/>
Which, kind by kind, she offers unto each?<br/>
Whence may the water-springs, beneath the sea,<br/>
Or inland rivers, far and wide away,<br/>
Keep the unfathomable ocean full?<br/>
And out of what does Ether feed the stars?<br/>
For lapsed years and infinite age must else<br/>
Have eat all shapes of mortal stock away:<br/>
But be it the Long Ago contained those germs,<br/>
By which this sum of things recruited lives,<br/>
Those same infallibly can never die,<br/>
Nor nothing to nothing evermore return.<br/>
And, too, the selfsame power might end alike<br/>
All things, were they not still together held<br/>
By matter eternal, shackled through its parts,<br/>
Now more, now less. A touch might be enough<br/>
To cause destruction. For the slightest force<br/>
Would loose the weft of things wherein no part<br/>
Were of imperishable stock. But now<br/>
Because the fastenings of primordial parts<br/>
Are put together diversely and stuff<br/>
Is everlasting, things abide the same<br/>
Unhurt and sure, until some power comes on<br/>
Strong to destroy the warp and woof of each:<br/>
Nothing returns to naught; but all return<br/>
At their collapse to primal forms of stuff.<br/>
Lo, the rains perish which Ether-father throws<br/>
Down to the bosom of Earth-mother; but then<br/>
Upsprings the shining grain, and boughs are green<br/>
Amid the trees, and trees themselves wax big<br/>
And lade themselves with fruits; and hence in turn<br/>
The race of man and all the wild are fed;<br/>
Hence joyful cities thrive with boys and girls;<br/>
And leafy woodlands echo with new birds;<br/>
Hence cattle, fat and drowsy, lay their bulk<br/>
Along the joyous pastures whilst the drops<br/>
Of white ooze trickle from distended bags;<br/>
Hence the young scamper on their weakling joints<br/>
Along the tender herbs, fresh hearts afrisk<br/>
With warm new milk. Thus naught of what so seems<br/>
Perishes utterly, since Nature ever<br/>
Upbuilds one thing from other, suffering naught<br/>
To come to birth but through some other's death.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>And now, since I have taught that things cannot<br/>
Be born from nothing, nor the same, when born,<br/>
To nothing be recalled, doubt not my words,<br/>
Because our eyes no primal germs perceive;<br/>
For mark those bodies which, though known to be<br/>
In this our world, are yet invisible:<br/>
The winds infuriate lash our face and frame,<br/>
Unseen, and swamp huge ships and rend the clouds,<br/>
Or, eddying wildly down, bestrew the plains<br/>
With mighty trees, or scour the mountain tops<br/>
With forest-crackling blasts. Thus on they rave<br/>
With uproar shrill and ominous moan. The winds,<br/>
'Tis clear, are sightless bodies sweeping through<br/>
The sea, the lands, the clouds along the sky,<br/>
Vexing and whirling and seizing all amain;<br/>
And forth they flow and pile destruction round,<br/>
Even as the water's soft and supple bulk<br/>
Becoming a river of abounding floods,<br/>
Which a wide downpour from the lofty hills<br/>
Swells with big showers, dashes headlong down<br/>
Fragments of woodland and whole branching trees;<br/>
Nor can the solid bridges bide the shock<br/>
As on the waters whelm: the turbulent stream,<br/>
Strong with a hundred rains, beats round the piers,<br/>
Crashes with havoc, and rolls beneath its waves<br/>
Down-toppled masonry and ponderous stone,<br/>
Hurling away whatever would oppose.<br/>
Even so must move the blasts of all the winds,<br/>
Which, when they spread, like to a mighty flood,<br/>
Hither or thither, drive things on before<br/>
And hurl to ground with still renewed assault,<br/>
Or sometimes in their circling vortex seize<br/>
And bear in cones of whirlwind down the world:<br/>
The winds are sightless bodies and naught else—<br/>
Since both in works and ways they rival well<br/>
The mighty rivers, the visible in form.<br/>
Then too we know the varied smells of things<br/>
Yet never to our nostrils see them come;<br/>
With eyes we view not burning heats, nor cold,<br/>
Nor are we wont men's voices to behold.<br/>
Yet these must be corporeal at the base,<br/>
Since thus they smite the senses: naught there is<br/>
Save body, having property of touch.<br/>
And raiment, hung by surf-beat shore, grows moist,<br/>
The same, spread out before the sun, will dry;<br/>
Yet no one saw how sank the moisture in,<br/>
Nor how by heat off-driven. Thus we know,<br/>
That moisture is dispersed about in bits<br/>
Too small for eyes to see. Another case:<br/>
A ring upon the finger thins away<br/>
Along the under side, with years and suns;<br/>
The drippings from the eaves will scoop the stone;<br/>
The hooked ploughshare, though of iron, wastes<br/>
Amid the fields insidiously. We view<br/>
The rock-paved highways worn by many feet;<br/>
And at the gates the brazen statues show<br/>
Their right hands leaner from the frequent touch<br/>
Of wayfarers innumerable who greet.<br/>
We see how wearing-down hath minished these,<br/>
But just what motes depart at any time,<br/>
The envious nature of vision bars our sight.<br/>
Lastly whatever days and nature add<br/>
Little by little, constraining things to grow<br/>
In due proportion, no gaze however keen<br/>
Of these our eyes hath watched and known. No more<br/>
Can we observe what's lost at any time,<br/>
When things wax old with eld and foul decay,<br/>
Or when salt seas eat under beetling crags.<br/>
Thus Nature ever by unseen bodies works.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> THE VOID </h2>
<p>But yet creation's neither crammed nor blocked<br/>
About by body: there's in things a void—<br/>
Which to have known will serve thee many a turn,<br/>
Nor will not leave thee wandering in doubt,<br/>
Forever searching in the sum of all,<br/>
And losing faith in these pronouncements mine.<br/>
There's place intangible, a void and room.<br/>
For were it not, things could in nowise move;<br/>
Since body's property to block and check<br/>
Would work on all and at an times the same.<br/>
Thus naught could evermore push forth and go,<br/>
Since naught elsewhere would yield a starting place.<br/>
But now through oceans, lands, and heights of heaven,<br/>
By divers causes and in divers modes,<br/>
Before our eyes we mark how much may move,<br/>
Which, finding not a void, would fail deprived<br/>
Of stir and motion; nay, would then have been<br/>
Nowise begot at all, since matter, then,<br/>
Had staid at rest, its parts together crammed.<br/>
Then too, however solid objects seem,<br/>
They yet are formed of matter mixed with void:<br/>
In rocks and caves the watery moisture seeps,<br/>
And beady drops stand out like plenteous tears;<br/>
And food finds way through every frame that lives;<br/>
The trees increase and yield the season's fruit<br/>
Because their food throughout the whole is poured,<br/>
Even from the deepest roots, through trunks and boughs;<br/>
And voices pass the solid walls and fly<br/>
Reverberant through shut doorways of a house;<br/>
And stiffening frost seeps inward to our bones.<br/>
Which but for voids for bodies to go through<br/>
'Tis clear could happen in nowise at all.<br/>
Again, why see we among objects some<br/>
Of heavier weight, but of no bulkier size?<br/>
Indeed, if in a ball of wool there be<br/>
As much of body as in lump of lead,<br/>
The two should weigh alike, since body tends<br/>
To load things downward, while the void abides,<br/>
By contrary nature, the imponderable.<br/>
Therefore, an object just as large but lighter<br/>
Declares infallibly its more of void;<br/>
Even as the heavier more of matter shows,<br/>
And how much less of vacant room inside.<br/>
That which we're seeking with sagacious quest<br/>
Exists, infallibly, commixed with things—<br/>
The void, the invisible inane.<br/>
<br/>
Right here<br/>
I am compelled a question to expound,<br/>
Forestalling something certain folk suppose,<br/>
Lest it avail to lead thee off from truth:<br/>
Waters (they say) before the shining breed<br/>
Of the swift scaly creatures somehow give,<br/>
And straightway open sudden liquid paths,<br/>
Because the fishes leave behind them room<br/>
To which at once the yielding billows stream.<br/>
Thus things among themselves can yet be moved,<br/>
And change their place, however full the Sum—<br/>
Received opinion, wholly false forsooth.<br/>
For where can scaly creatures forward dart,<br/>
Save where the waters give them room? Again,<br/>
Where can the billows yield a way, so long<br/>
As ever the fish are powerless to go?<br/>
Thus either all bodies of motion are deprived,<br/>
Or things contain admixture of a void<br/>
Where each thing gets its start in moving on.<br/>
<br/>
Lastly, where after impact two broad bodies<br/>
Suddenly spring apart, the air must crowd<br/>
The whole new void between those bodies formed;<br/>
But air, however it stream with hastening gusts,<br/>
Can yet not fill the gap at once—for first<br/>
It makes for one place, ere diffused through all.<br/>
And then, if haply any think this comes,<br/>
When bodies spring apart, because the air<br/>
Somehow condenses, wander they from truth:<br/>
For then a void is formed, where none before;<br/>
And, too, a void is filled which was before.<br/>
Nor can air be condensed in such a wise;<br/>
Nor, granting it could, without a void, I hold,<br/>
It still could not contract upon itself<br/>
And draw its parts together into one.<br/>
Wherefore, despite demur and counter-speech,<br/>
Confess thou must there is a void in things.<br/>
<br/>
And still I might by many an argument<br/>
Here scrape together credence for my words.<br/>
But for the keen eye these mere footprints serve,<br/>
Whereby thou mayest know the rest thyself.<br/>
As dogs full oft with noses on the ground,<br/>
Find out the silent lairs, though hid in brush,<br/>
Of beasts, the mountain-rangers, when but once<br/>
They scent the certain footsteps of the way,<br/>
Thus thou thyself in themes like these alone<br/>
Can hunt from thought to thought, and keenly wind<br/>
Along even onward to the secret places<br/>
And drag out truth. But, if thou loiter loth<br/>
Or veer, however little, from the point,<br/>
This I can promise, Memmius, for a fact:<br/>
Such copious drafts my singing tongue shall pour<br/>
From the large well-springs of my plenished breast<br/>
That much I dread slow age will steal and coil<br/>
Along our members, and unloose the gates<br/>
Of life within us, ere for thee my verse<br/>
Hath put within thine ears the stores of proofs<br/>
At hand for one soever question broached.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> NOTHING EXISTS per se EXCEPT ATOMS AND THE VOID </h2>
<p>But, now again to weave the tale begun,<br/>
All nature, then, as self-sustained, consists<br/>
Of twain of things: of bodies and of void<br/>
In which they're set, and where they're moved around.<br/>
For common instinct of our race declares<br/>
That body of itself exists: unless<br/>
This primal faith, deep-founded, fail us not,<br/>
Naught will there be whereunto to appeal<br/>
On things occult when seeking aught to prove<br/>
By reasonings of mind. Again, without<br/>
That place and room, which we do call the inane,<br/>
Nowhere could bodies then be set, nor go<br/>
Hither or thither at all—as shown before.<br/>
Besides, there's naught of which thou canst declare<br/>
It lives disjoined from body, shut from void—<br/>
A kind of third in nature. For whatever<br/>
Exists must be a somewhat; and the same,<br/>
If tangible, however fight and slight,<br/>
Will yet increase the count of body's sum,<br/>
With its own augmentation big or small;<br/>
But, if intangible and powerless ever<br/>
To keep a thing from passing through itself<br/>
On any side, 'twill be naught else but that<br/>
Which we do call the empty, the inane.<br/>
Again, whate'er exists, as of itself,<br/>
Must either act or suffer action on it,<br/>
Or else be that wherein things move and be:<br/>
Naught, saving body, acts, is acted on;<br/>
Naught but the inane can furnish room. And thus,<br/>
Beside the inane and bodies, is no third<br/>
Nature amid the number of all things—<br/>
Remainder none to fall at any time<br/>
Under our senses, nor be seized and seen<br/>
By any man through reasonings of mind.<br/>
Name o'er creation with what names thou wilt,<br/>
Thou'lt find but properties of those first twain,<br/>
Or see but accidents those twain produce.<br/>
<br/>
A property is that which not at all<br/>
Can be disjoined and severed from a thing<br/>
Without a fatal dissolution: such,<br/>
Weight to the rocks, heat to the fire, and flow<br/>
To the wide waters, touch to corporal things,<br/>
Intangibility to the viewless void.<br/>
But state of slavery, pauperhood, and wealth,<br/>
Freedom, and war, and concord, and all else<br/>
Which come and go whilst nature stands the same,<br/>
We're wont, and rightly, to call accidents.<br/>
Even time exists not of itself; but sense<br/>
Reads out of things what happened long ago,<br/>
What presses now, and what shall follow after:<br/>
No man, we must admit, feels time itself,<br/>
Disjoined from motion and repose of things.<br/>
Thus, when they say there "is" the ravishment<br/>
Of Princess Helen, "is" the siege and sack<br/>
Of Trojan Town, look out, they force us not<br/>
To admit these acts existent by themselves,<br/>
Merely because those races of mankind<br/>
(Of whom these acts were accidents) long since<br/>
Irrevocable age has borne away:<br/>
For all past actions may be said to be<br/>
But accidents, in one way, of mankind,—<br/>
In other, of some region of the world.<br/>
Add, too, had been no matter, and no room<br/>
Wherein all things go on, the fire of love<br/>
Upblown by that fair form, the glowing coal<br/>
Under the Phrygian Alexander's breast,<br/>
Had ne'er enkindled that renowned strife<br/>
Of savage war, nor had the wooden horse<br/>
Involved in flames old Pergama, by a birth<br/>
At midnight of a brood of the Hellenes.<br/>
And thus thou canst remark that every act<br/>
At bottom exists not of itself, nor is<br/>
As body is, nor has like name with void;<br/>
But rather of sort more fitly to be called<br/>
An accident of body, and of place<br/>
Wherein all things go on.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> CHARACTER OF THE ATOMS </h2>
<p>Bodies, again,<br/>
Are partly primal germs of things, and partly<br/>
Unions deriving from the primal germs.<br/>
And those which are the primal germs of things<br/>
No power can quench; for in the end they conquer<br/>
By their own solidness; though hard it be<br/>
To think that aught in things has solid frame;<br/>
For lightnings pass, no less than voice and shout,<br/>
Through hedging walls of houses, and the iron<br/>
White-dazzles in the fire, and rocks will burn<br/>
With exhalations fierce and burst asunder.<br/>
Totters the rigid gold dissolved in heat;<br/>
The ice of bronze melts conquered in the flame;<br/>
Warmth and the piercing cold through silver seep,<br/>
Since, with the cups held rightly in the hand,<br/>
We oft feel both, as from above is poured<br/>
The dew of waters between their shining sides:<br/>
So true it is no solid form is found.<br/>
But yet because true reason and nature of things<br/>
Constrain us, come, whilst in few verses now<br/>
I disentangle how there still exist<br/>
Bodies of solid, everlasting frame—<br/>
The seeds of things, the primal germs we teach,<br/>
Whence all creation around us came to be.<br/>
First since we know a twofold nature exists,<br/>
Of things, both twain and utterly unlike—<br/>
Body, and place in which an things go on—<br/>
Then each must be both for and through itself,<br/>
And all unmixed: where'er be empty space,<br/>
There body's not; and so where body bides,<br/>
There not at all exists the void inane.<br/>
Thus primal bodies are solid, without a void.<br/>
But since there's void in all begotten things,<br/>
All solid matter must be round the same;<br/>
Nor, by true reason canst thou prove aught hides<br/>
And holds a void within its body, unless<br/>
Thou grant what holds it be a solid. Know,<br/>
That which can hold a void of things within<br/>
Can be naught else than matter in union knit.<br/>
Thus matter, consisting of a solid frame,<br/>
Hath power to be eternal, though all else,<br/>
Though all creation, be dissolved away.<br/>
Again, were naught of empty and inane,<br/>
The world were then a solid; as, without<br/>
Some certain bodies to fill the places held,<br/>
The world that is were but a vacant void.<br/>
And so, infallibly, alternate-wise<br/>
Body and void are still distinguished,<br/>
Since nature knows no wholly full nor void.<br/>
There are, then, certain bodies, possessed of power<br/>
To vary forever the empty and the full;<br/>
And these can nor be sundered from without<br/>
By beats and blows, nor from within be torn<br/>
By penetration, nor be overthrown<br/>
By any assault soever through the world—<br/>
For without void, naught can be crushed, it seems,<br/>
Nor broken, nor severed by a cut in twain,<br/>
Nor can it take the damp, or seeping cold<br/>
Or piercing fire, those old destroyers three;<br/>
But the more void within a thing, the more<br/>
Entirely it totters at their sure assault.<br/>
Thus if first bodies be, as I have taught,<br/>
Solid, without a void, they must be then<br/>
Eternal; and, if matter ne'er had been<br/>
Eternal, long ere now had all things gone<br/>
Back into nothing utterly, and all<br/>
We see around from nothing had been born—<br/>
But since I taught above that naught can be<br/>
From naught created, nor the once begotten<br/>
To naught be summoned back, these primal germs<br/>
Must have an immortality of frame.<br/>
And into these must each thing be resolved,<br/>
When comes its supreme hour, that thus there be<br/>
At hand the stuff for plenishing the world.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>So primal germs have solid singleness<br/>
Nor otherwise could they have been conserved<br/>
Through aeons and infinity of time<br/>
For the replenishment of wasted worlds.<br/>
Once more, if nature had given a scope for things<br/>
To be forever broken more and more,<br/>
By now the bodies of matter would have been<br/>
So far reduced by breakings in old days<br/>
That from them nothing could, at season fixed,<br/>
Be born, and arrive its prime and top of life.<br/>
For, lo, each thing is quicker marred than made;<br/>
And so whate'er the long infinitude<br/>
Of days and all fore-passed time would now<br/>
By this have broken and ruined and dissolved,<br/>
That same could ne'er in all remaining time<br/>
Be builded up for plenishing the world.<br/>
But mark: infallibly a fixed bound<br/>
Remaineth stablished 'gainst their breaking down;<br/>
Since we behold each thing soever renewed,<br/>
And unto all, their seasons, after their kind,<br/>
Wherein they arrive the flower of their age.<br/>
<br/>
Again, if bounds have not been set against<br/>
The breaking down of this corporeal world,<br/>
Yet must all bodies of whatever things<br/>
Have still endured from everlasting time<br/>
Unto this present, as not yet assailed<br/>
By shocks of peril. But because the same<br/>
Are, to thy thinking, of a nature frail,<br/>
It ill accords that thus they could remain<br/>
(As thus they do) through everlasting time,<br/>
Vexed through the ages (as indeed they are)<br/>
By the innumerable blows of chance.<br/>
<br/>
So in our programme of creation, mark<br/>
How 'tis that, though the bodies of all stuff<br/>
Are solid to the core, we yet explain<br/>
The ways whereby some things are fashioned soft—<br/>
Air, water, earth, and fiery exhalations—<br/>
And by what force they function and go on:<br/>
The fact is founded in the void of things.<br/>
But if the primal germs themselves be soft,<br/>
Reason cannot be brought to bear to show<br/>
The ways whereby may be created these<br/>
Great crags of basalt and the during iron;<br/>
For their whole nature will profoundly lack<br/>
The first foundations of a solid frame.<br/>
But powerful in old simplicity,<br/>
Abide the solid, the primeval germs;<br/>
And by their combinations more condensed,<br/>
All objects can be tightly knit and bound<br/>
And made to show unconquerable strength.<br/>
Again, since all things kind by kind obtain<br/>
Fixed bounds of growing and conserving life;<br/>
Since Nature hath inviolably decreed<br/>
What each can do, what each can never do;<br/>
Since naught is changed, but all things so abide<br/>
That ever the variegated birds reveal<br/>
The spots or stripes peculiar to their kind,<br/>
Spring after spring: thus surely all that is<br/>
Must be composed of matter immutable.<br/>
For if the primal germs in any wise<br/>
Were open to conquest and to change, 'twould be<br/>
Uncertain also what could come to birth<br/>
And what could not, and by what law to each<br/>
Its scope prescribed, its boundary stone that clings<br/>
So deep in Time. Nor could the generations<br/>
Kind after kind so often reproduce<br/>
The nature, habits, motions, ways of life,<br/>
Of their progenitors.<br/>
<br/>
And then again,<br/>
Since there is ever an extreme bounding point<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Of that first body which our senses now<br/>
Cannot perceive: That bounding point indeed<br/>
Exists without all parts, a minimum<br/>
Of nature, nor was e'er a thing apart,<br/>
As of itself,—nor shall hereafter be,<br/>
Since 'tis itself still parcel of another,<br/>
A first and single part, whence other parts<br/>
And others similar in order lie<br/>
In a packed phalanx, filling to the full<br/>
The nature of first body: being thus<br/>
Not self-existent, they must cleave to that<br/>
From which in nowise they can sundered be.<br/>
So primal germs have solid singleness,<br/>
Which tightly packed and closely joined cohere<br/>
By virtue of their minim particles—<br/>
No compound by mere union of the same;<br/>
But strong in their eternal singleness,<br/>
Nature, reserving them as seeds for things,<br/>
Permitteth naught of rupture or decrease.<br/>
<br/>
Moreover, were there not a minimum,<br/>
The smallest bodies would have infinites,<br/>
Since then a half-of-half could still be halved,<br/>
With limitless division less and less.<br/>
Then what the difference 'twixt the sum and least?<br/>
None: for however infinite the sum,<br/>
Yet even the smallest would consist the same<br/>
Of infinite parts. But since true reason here<br/>
Protests, denying that the mind can think it,<br/>
Convinced thou must confess such things there are<br/>
As have no parts, the minimums of nature.<br/>
And since these are, likewise confess thou must<br/>
That primal bodies are solid and eterne.<br/>
Again, if Nature, creatress of all things,<br/>
Were wont to force all things to be resolved<br/>
Unto least parts, then would she not avail<br/>
To reproduce from out them anything;<br/>
Because whate'er is not endowed with parts<br/>
Cannot possess those properties required<br/>
Of generative stuff—divers connections,<br/>
Weights, blows, encounters, motions, whereby things<br/>
Forevermore have being and go on.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> CONFUTATION OF OTHER PHILOSOPHERS </h2>
<p>And on such grounds it is that those who held<br/>
The stuff of things is fire, and out of fire<br/>
Alone the cosmic sum is formed, are seen<br/>
Mightily from true reason to have lapsed.<br/>
Of whom, chief leader to do battle, comes<br/>
That Heraclitus, famous for dark speech<br/>
Among the silly, not the serious Greeks<br/>
Who search for truth. For dolts are ever prone<br/>
That to bewonder and adore which hides<br/>
Beneath distorted words, holding that true<br/>
Which sweetly tickles in their stupid ears,<br/>
Or which is rouged in finely finished phrase.<br/>
For how, I ask, can things so varied be,<br/>
If formed of fire, single and pure? No whit<br/>
'Twould help for fire to be condensed or thinned,<br/>
If all the parts of fire did still preserve<br/>
But fire's own nature, seen before in gross.<br/>
The heat were keener with the parts compressed,<br/>
Milder, again, when severed or dispersed—<br/>
And more than this thou canst conceive of naught<br/>
That from such causes could become; much less<br/>
Might earth's variety of things be born<br/>
From any fires soever, dense or rare.<br/>
This too: if they suppose a void in things,<br/>
Then fires can be condensed and still left rare;<br/>
But since they see such opposites of thought<br/>
Rising against them, and are loath to leave<br/>
An unmixed void in things, they fear the steep<br/>
And lose the road of truth. Nor do they see,<br/>
That, if from things we take away the void,<br/>
All things are then condensed, and out of all<br/>
One body made, which has no power to dart<br/>
Swiftly from out itself not anything—<br/>
As throws the fire its light and warmth around,<br/>
Giving thee proof its parts are not compact.<br/>
But if perhaps they think, in other wise,<br/>
Fires through their combinations can be quenched<br/>
And change their substance, very well: behold,<br/>
If fire shall spare to do so in no part,<br/>
Then heat will perish utterly and all,<br/>
And out of nothing would the world be formed.<br/>
For change in anything from out its bounds<br/>
Means instant death of that which was before;<br/>
And thus a somewhat must persist unharmed<br/>
Amid the world, lest all return to naught,<br/>
And, born from naught, abundance thrive anew.<br/>
Now since indeed there are those surest bodies<br/>
Which keep their nature evermore the same,<br/>
Upon whose going out and coming in<br/>
And changed order things their nature change,<br/>
And all corporeal substances transformed,<br/>
'Tis thine to know those primal bodies, then,<br/>
Are not of fire. For 'twere of no avail<br/>
Should some depart and go away, and some<br/>
Be added new, and some be changed in order,<br/>
If still all kept their nature of old heat:<br/>
For whatsoever they created then<br/>
Would still in any case be only fire.<br/>
The truth, I fancy, this: bodies there are<br/>
Whose clashings, motions, order, posture, shapes<br/>
Produce the fire and which, by order changed,<br/>
Do change the nature of the thing produced,<br/>
And are thereafter nothing like to fire<br/>
Nor whatso else has power to send its bodies<br/>
With impact touching on the senses' touch.<br/>
<br/>
Again, to say that all things are but fire<br/>
And no true thing in number of all things<br/>
Exists but fire, as this same fellow says,<br/>
Seems crazed folly. For the man himself<br/>
Against the senses by the senses fights,<br/>
And hews at that through which is all belief,<br/>
Through which indeed unto himself is known<br/>
The thing he calls the fire. For, though he thinks<br/>
The senses truly can perceive the fire,<br/>
He thinks they cannot as regards all else,<br/>
Which still are palpably as clear to sense—<br/>
To me a thought inept and crazy too.<br/>
For whither shall we make appeal? for what<br/>
More certain than our senses can there be<br/>
Whereby to mark asunder error and truth?<br/>
Besides, why rather do away with all,<br/>
And wish to allow heat only, then deny<br/>
The fire and still allow all else to be?—<br/>
Alike the madness either way it seems.<br/>
Thus whosoe'er have held the stuff of things<br/>
To be but fire, and out of fire the sum,<br/>
And whosoever have constituted air<br/>
As first beginning of begotten things,<br/>
And all whoever have held that of itself<br/>
Water alone contrives things, or that earth<br/>
Createth all and changes things anew<br/>
To divers natures, mightily they seem<br/>
A long way to have wandered from the truth.<br/>
<br/>
Add, too, whoever make the primal stuff<br/>
Twofold, by joining air to fire, and earth<br/>
To water; add who deem that things can grow<br/>
Out of the four—fire, earth, and breath, and rain;<br/>
As first Empedocles of Acragas,<br/>
Whom that three-cornered isle of all the lands<br/>
Bore on her coasts, around which flows and flows<br/>
In mighty bend and bay the Ionic seas,<br/>
Splashing the brine from off their gray-green waves.<br/>
Here, billowing onward through the narrow straits,<br/>
Swift ocean cuts her boundaries from the shores<br/>
Of the Italic mainland. Here the waste<br/>
Charybdis; and here Aetna rumbles threats<br/>
To gather anew such furies of its flames<br/>
As with its force anew to vomit fires,<br/>
Belched from its throat, and skyward bear anew<br/>
Its lightnings' flash. And though for much she seem<br/>
The mighty and the wondrous isle to men,<br/>
Most rich in all good things, and fortified<br/>
With generous strength of heroes, she hath ne'er<br/>
Possessed within her aught of more renown,<br/>
Nor aught more holy, wonderful, and dear<br/>
Than this true man. Nay, ever so far and pure<br/>
The lofty music of his breast divine<br/>
Lifts up its voice and tells of glories found,<br/>
That scarce he seems of human stock create.<br/>
<br/>
Yet he and those forementioned (known to be<br/>
So far beneath him, less than he in all),<br/>
Though, as discoverers of much goodly truth,<br/>
They gave, as 'twere from out of the heart's own shrine,<br/>
Responses holier and soundlier based<br/>
Than ever the Pythia pronounced for men<br/>
From out the triped and the Delphian laurel,<br/>
Have still in matter of first-elements<br/>
Made ruin of themselves, and, great men, great<br/>
Indeed and heavy there for them the fall:<br/>
First, because, banishing the void from things,<br/>
They yet assign them motion, and allow<br/>
Things soft and loosely textured to exist,<br/>
As air, dew, fire, earth, animals, and grains,<br/>
Without admixture of void amid their frame.<br/>
Next, because, thinking there can be no end<br/>
In cutting bodies down to less and less<br/>
Nor pause established to their breaking up,<br/>
They hold there is no minimum in things;<br/>
Albeit we see the boundary point of aught<br/>
Is that which to our senses seems its least,<br/>
Whereby thou mayst conjecture, that, because<br/>
The things thou canst not mark have boundary points,<br/>
They surely have their minimums. Then, too,<br/>
Since these philosophers ascribe to things<br/>
Soft primal germs, which we behold to be<br/>
Of birth and body mortal, thus, throughout,<br/>
The sum of things must be returned to naught,<br/>
And, born from naught, abundance thrive anew—<br/>
Thou seest how far each doctrine stands from truth.<br/>
And, next, these bodies are among themselves<br/>
In many ways poisons and foes to each,<br/>
Wherefore their congress will destroy them quite<br/>
Or drive asunder as we see in storms<br/>
Rains, winds, and lightnings all asunder fly.<br/>
<br/>
Thus too, if all things are create of four,<br/>
And all again dissolved into the four,<br/>
How can the four be called the primal germs<br/>
Of things, more than all things themselves be thought,<br/>
By retroversion, primal germs of them?<br/>
For ever alternately are both begot,<br/>
With interchange of nature and aspect<br/>
From immemorial time. But if percase<br/>
Thou think'st the frame of fire and earth, the air,<br/>
The dew of water can in such wise meet<br/>
As not by mingling to resign their nature,<br/>
From them for thee no world can be create—<br/>
No thing of breath, no stock or stalk of tree:<br/>
In the wild congress of this varied heap<br/>
Each thing its proper nature will display,<br/>
And air will palpably be seen mixed up<br/>
With earth together, unquenched heat with water.<br/>
But primal germs in bringing things to birth<br/>
Must have a latent, unseen quality,<br/>
Lest some outstanding alien element<br/>
Confuse and minish in the thing create<br/>
Its proper being.<br/>
<br/>
But these men begin<br/>
From heaven, and from its fires; and first they feign<br/>
That fire will turn into the winds of air,<br/>
Next, that from air the rain begotten is,<br/>
And earth created out of rain, and then<br/>
That all, reversely, are returned from earth—<br/>
The moisture first, then air thereafter heat—<br/>
And that these same ne'er cease in interchange,<br/>
To go their ways from heaven to earth, from earth<br/>
Unto the stars of the aethereal world—<br/>
Which in no wise at all the germs can do.<br/>
Since an immutable somewhat still must be,<br/>
Lest all things utterly be sped to naught;<br/>
For change in anything from out its bounds<br/>
Means instant death of that which was before.<br/>
Wherefore, since those things, mentioned heretofore,<br/>
Suffer a changed state, they must derive<br/>
From others ever unconvertible,<br/>
Lest an things utterly return to naught.<br/>
Then why not rather presuppose there be<br/>
Bodies with such a nature furnished forth<br/>
That, if perchance they have created fire,<br/>
Can still (by virtue of a few withdrawn,<br/>
Or added few, and motion and order changed)<br/>
Fashion the winds of air, and thus all things<br/>
Forevermore be interchanged with all?<br/>
<br/>
"But facts in proof are manifest," thou sayest,<br/>
"That all things grow into the winds of air<br/>
And forth from earth are nourished, and unless<br/>
The season favour at propitious hour<br/>
With rains enough to set the trees a-reel<br/>
Under the soak of bulking thunderheads,<br/>
And sun, for its share, foster and give heat,<br/>
No grains, nor trees, nor breathing things can grow."<br/>
True—and unless hard food and moisture soft<br/>
Recruited man, his frame would waste away,<br/>
And life dissolve from out his thews and bones;<br/>
For out of doubt recruited and fed are we<br/>
By certain things, as other things by others.<br/>
Because in many ways the many germs<br/>
Common to many things are mixed in things,<br/>
No wonder 'tis that therefore divers things<br/>
By divers things are nourished. And, again,<br/>
Often it matters vastly with what others,<br/>
In what positions the primordial germs<br/>
Are bound together, and what motions, too,<br/>
They give and get among themselves; for these<br/>
Same germs do put together sky, sea, lands,<br/>
Rivers, and sun, grains, trees, and breathing things,<br/>
But yet commixed they are in divers modes<br/>
With divers things, forever as they move.<br/>
Nay, thou beholdest in our verses here<br/>
Elements many, common to many worlds,<br/>
Albeit thou must confess each verse, each word<br/>
From one another differs both in sense<br/>
And ring of sound—so much the elements<br/>
Can bring about by change of order alone.<br/>
But those which are the primal germs of things<br/>
Have power to work more combinations still,<br/>
Whence divers things can be produced in turn.<br/>
<br/>
Now let us also take for scrutiny<br/>
The homeomeria of Anaxagoras,<br/>
So called by Greeks, for which our pauper-speech<br/>
Yieldeth no name in the Italian tongue,<br/>
Although the thing itself is not o'erhard<br/>
For explanation. First, then, when he speaks<br/>
Of this homeomeria of things, he thinks<br/>
Bones to be sprung from littlest bones minute,<br/>
And from minute and littlest flesh all flesh,<br/>
And blood created out of drops of blood,<br/>
Conceiving gold compact of grains of gold,<br/>
And earth concreted out of bits of earth,<br/>
Fire made of fires, and water out of waters,<br/>
Feigning the like with all the rest of stuff.<br/>
Yet he concedes not any void in things,<br/>
Nor any limit to cutting bodies down.<br/>
Wherefore to me he seems on both accounts<br/>
To err no less than those we named before.<br/>
Add too: these germs he feigns are far too frail—<br/>
If they be germs primordial furnished forth<br/>
With but same nature as the things themselves,<br/>
And travail and perish equally with those,<br/>
And no rein curbs them from annihilation.<br/>
For which will last against the grip and crush<br/>
Under the teeth of death? the fire? the moist?<br/>
Or else the air? which then? the blood? the bones?<br/>
No one, methinks, when every thing will be<br/>
At bottom as mortal as whate'er we mark<br/>
To perish by force before our gazing eyes.<br/>
But my appeal is to the proofs above<br/>
That things cannot fall back to naught, nor yet<br/>
From naught increase. And now again, since food<br/>
Augments and nourishes the human frame,<br/>
'Tis thine to know our veins and blood and bones<br/>
And thews are formed of particles unlike<br/>
To them in kind; or if they say all foods<br/>
Are of mixed substance having in themselves<br/>
Small bodies of thews, and bones, and also veins<br/>
And particles of blood, then every food,<br/>
Solid or liquid, must itself be thought<br/>
As made and mixed of things unlike in kind—<br/>
Of bones, of thews, of ichor and of blood.<br/>
Again, if all the bodies which upgrow<br/>
From earth, are first within the earth, then earth<br/>
Must be compound of alien substances.<br/>
Which spring and bloom abroad from out the earth.<br/>
Transfer the argument, and thou may'st use<br/>
The selfsame words: if flame and smoke and ash<br/>
Still lurk unseen within the wood, the wood<br/>
Must be compound of alien substances<br/>
Which spring from out the wood.<br/>
<br/>
Right here remains<br/>
A certain slender means to skulk from truth,<br/>
Which Anaxagoras takes unto himself,<br/>
Who holds that all things lurk commixed with all<br/>
While that one only comes to view, of which<br/>
The bodies exceed in number all the rest,<br/>
And lie more close to hand and at the fore—<br/>
A notion banished from true reason far.<br/>
For then 'twere meet that kernels of the grains<br/>
Should oft, when crunched between the might of stones,<br/>
Give forth a sign of blood, or of aught else<br/>
Which in our human frame is fed; and that<br/>
Rock rubbed on rock should yield a gory ooze.<br/>
Likewise the herbs ought oft to give forth drops<br/>
Of sweet milk, flavoured like the uddered sheep's;<br/>
Indeed we ought to find, when crumbling up<br/>
The earthy clods, there herbs, and grains, and leaves,<br/>
All sorts dispersed minutely in the soil;<br/>
Lastly we ought to find in cloven wood<br/>
Ashes and smoke and bits of fire there hid.<br/>
But since fact teaches this is not the case,<br/>
'Tis thine to know things are not mixed with things<br/>
Thuswise; but seeds, common to many things,<br/>
Commixed in many ways, must lurk in things.<br/>
<br/>
"But often it happens on skiey hills" thou sayest,<br/>
"That neighbouring tops of lofty trees are rubbed<br/>
One against other, smote by the blustering south,<br/>
Till all ablaze with bursting flower of flame."<br/>
Good sooth—yet fire is not ingraft in wood,<br/>
But many are the seeds of heat, and when<br/>
Rubbing together they together flow,<br/>
They start the conflagrations in the forests.<br/>
Whereas if flame, already fashioned, lay<br/>
Stored up within the forests, then the fires<br/>
Could not for any time be kept unseen,<br/>
But would be laying all the wildwood waste<br/>
And burning all the boscage. Now dost see<br/>
(Even as we said a little space above)<br/>
How mightily it matters with what others,<br/>
In what positions these same primal germs<br/>
Are bound together? And what motions, too,<br/>
They give and get among themselves? how, hence,<br/>
The same, if altered 'mongst themselves, can body<br/>
Both igneous and ligneous objects forth—<br/>
Precisely as these words themselves are made<br/>
By somewhat altering their elements,<br/>
Although we mark with name indeed distinct<br/>
The igneous from the ligneous. Once again,<br/>
If thou suppose whatever thou beholdest,<br/>
Among all visible objects, cannot be,<br/>
Unless thou feign bodies of matter endowed<br/>
With a like nature,—by thy vain device<br/>
For thee will perish all the germs of things:<br/>
'Twill come to pass they'll laugh aloud, like men,<br/>
Shaken asunder by a spasm of mirth,<br/>
Or moisten with salty tear-drops cheeks and chins.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> THE INFINITY OF THE UNIVERSE </h2>
<p>Now learn of what remains! More keenly hear!<br/>
And for myself, my mind is not deceived<br/>
How dark it is: But the large hope of praise<br/>
Hath strook with pointed thyrsus through my heart;<br/>
On the same hour hath strook into my breast<br/>
Sweet love of the Muses, wherewith now instinct,<br/>
I wander afield, thriving in sturdy thought,<br/>
Through unpathed haunts of the Pierides,<br/>
Trodden by step of none before. I joy<br/>
To come on undefiled fountains there,<br/>
To drain them deep; I joy to pluck new flowers,<br/>
To seek for this my head a signal crown<br/>
From regions where the Muses never yet<br/>
Have garlanded the temples of a man:<br/>
First, since I teach concerning mighty things,<br/>
And go right on to loose from round the mind<br/>
The tightened coils of dread religion;<br/>
Next, since, concerning themes so dark, I frame<br/>
Songs so pellucid, touching all throughout<br/>
Even with the Muses' charm—which, as 'twould seem,<br/>
Is not without a reasonable ground:<br/>
But as physicians, when they seek to give<br/>
Young boys the nauseous wormwood, first do touch<br/>
The brim around the cup with the sweet juice<br/>
And yellow of the honey, in order that<br/>
The thoughtless age of boyhood be cajoled<br/>
As far as the lips, and meanwhile swallow down<br/>
The wormwood's bitter draught, and, though befooled,<br/>
Be yet not merely duped, but rather thus<br/>
Grow strong again with recreated health:<br/>
So now I too (since this my doctrine seems<br/>
In general somewhat woeful unto those<br/>
Who've had it not in hand, and since the crowd<br/>
Starts back from it in horror) have desired<br/>
To expound our doctrine unto thee in song<br/>
Soft-speaking and Pierian, and, as 'twere,<br/>
To touch it with sweet honey of the Muse—<br/>
If by such method haply I might hold<br/>
The mind of thee upon these lines of ours,<br/>
Till thou see through the nature of all things,<br/>
And how exists the interwoven frame.<br/>
<br/>
But since I've taught that bodies of matter, made<br/>
Completely solid, hither and thither fly<br/>
Forevermore unconquered through all time,<br/>
Now come, and whether to the sum of them<br/>
There be a limit or be none, for thee<br/>
Let us unfold; likewise what has been found<br/>
To be the wide inane, or room, or space<br/>
Wherein all things soever do go on,<br/>
Let us examine if it finite be<br/>
All and entire, or reach unmeasured round<br/>
And downward an illimitable profound.<br/>
<br/>
Thus, then, the All that is is limited<br/>
In no one region of its onward paths,<br/>
For then 'tmust have forever its beyond.<br/>
And a beyond 'tis seen can never be<br/>
For aught, unless still further on there be<br/>
A somewhat somewhere that may bound the same—<br/>
So that the thing be seen still on to where<br/>
The nature of sensation of that thing<br/>
Can follow it no longer. Now because<br/>
Confess we must there's naught beside the sum,<br/>
There's no beyond, and so it lacks all end.<br/>
It matters nothing where thou post thyself,<br/>
In whatsoever regions of the same;<br/>
Even any place a man has set him down<br/>
Still leaves about him the unbounded all<br/>
Outward in all directions; or, supposing<br/>
A moment the all of space finite to be,<br/>
If some one farthest traveller runs forth<br/>
Unto the extreme coasts and throws ahead<br/>
A flying spear, is't then thy wish to think<br/>
It goes, hurled off amain, to where 'twas sent<br/>
And shoots afar, or that some object there<br/>
Can thwart and stop it? For the one or other<br/>
Thou must admit and take. Either of which<br/>
Shuts off escape for thee, and does compel<br/>
That thou concede the all spreads everywhere,<br/>
Owning no confines. Since whether there be<br/>
Aught that may block and check it so it comes<br/>
Not where 'twas sent, nor lodges in its goal,<br/>
Or whether borne along, in either view<br/>
'Thas started not from any end. And so<br/>
I'll follow on, and whereso'er thou set<br/>
The extreme coasts, I'll query, "what becomes<br/>
Thereafter of thy spear?" 'Twill come to pass<br/>
That nowhere can a world's-end be, and that<br/>
The chance for further flight prolongs forever<br/>
The flight itself. Besides, were all the space<br/>
Of the totality and sum shut in<br/>
With fixed coasts, and bounded everywhere,<br/>
Then would the abundance of world's matter flow<br/>
Together by solid weight from everywhere<br/>
Still downward to the bottom of the world,<br/>
Nor aught could happen under cope of sky,<br/>
Nor could there be a sky at all or sun—<br/>
Indeed, where matter all one heap would lie,<br/>
By having settled during infinite time.<br/>
But in reality, repose is given<br/>
Unto no bodies 'mongst the elements,<br/>
Because there is no bottom whereunto<br/>
They might, as 'twere, together flow, and where<br/>
They might take up their undisturbed abodes.<br/>
In endless motion everything goes on<br/>
Forevermore; out of all regions, even<br/>
Out of the pit below, from forth the vast,<br/>
Are hurtled bodies evermore supplied.<br/>
The nature of room, the space of the abyss<br/>
Is such that even the flashing thunderbolts<br/>
Can neither speed upon their courses through,<br/>
Gliding across eternal tracts of time,<br/>
Nor, further, bring to pass, as on they run,<br/>
That they may bate their journeying one whit:<br/>
Such huge abundance spreads for things around—<br/>
Room off to every quarter, without end.<br/>
Lastly, before our very eyes is seen<br/>
Thing to bound thing: air hedges hill from hill,<br/>
And mountain walls hedge air; land ends the sea,<br/>
And sea in turn all lands; but for the All<br/>
Truly is nothing which outside may bound.<br/>
That, too, the sum of things itself may not<br/>
Have power to fix a measure of its own,<br/>
Great nature guards, she who compels the void<br/>
To bound all body, as body all the void,<br/>
Thus rendering by these alternates the whole<br/>
An infinite; or else the one or other,<br/>
Being unbounded by the other, spreads,<br/>
Even by its single nature, ne'ertheless<br/>
Immeasurably forth....<br/>
Nor sea, nor earth, nor shining vaults of sky,<br/>
Nor breed of mortals, nor holy limbs of gods<br/>
Could keep their place least portion of an hour:<br/>
For, driven apart from out its meetings fit,<br/>
The stock of stuff, dissolved, would be borne<br/>
Along the illimitable inane afar,<br/>
Or rather, in fact, would ne'er have once combined<br/>
And given a birth to aught, since, scattered wide,<br/>
It could not be united. For of truth<br/>
Neither by counsel did the primal germs<br/>
'Stablish themselves, as by keen act of mind,<br/>
Each in its proper place; nor did they make,<br/>
Forsooth, a compact how each germ should move;<br/>
But since, being many and changed in many modes<br/>
Along the All, they're driven abroad and vexed<br/>
By blow on blow, even from all time of old,<br/>
They thus at last, after attempting all<br/>
The kinds of motion and conjoining, come<br/>
Into those great arrangements out of which<br/>
This sum of things established is create,<br/>
By which, moreover, through the mighty years,<br/>
It is preserved, when once it has been thrown<br/>
Into the proper motions, bringing to pass<br/>
That ever the streams refresh the greedy main<br/>
With river-waves abounding, and that earth,<br/>
Lapped in warm exhalations of the sun,<br/>
Renews her broods, and that the lusty race<br/>
Of breathing creatures bears and blooms, and that<br/>
The gliding fires of ether are alive—<br/>
What still the primal germs nowise could do,<br/>
Unless from out the infinite of space<br/>
Could come supply of matter, whence in season<br/>
They're wont whatever losses to repair.<br/>
For as the nature of breathing creatures wastes,<br/>
Losing its body, when deprived of food:<br/>
So all things have to be dissolved as soon<br/>
As matter, diverted by what means soever<br/>
From off its course, shall fail to be on hand.<br/>
Nor can the blows from outward still conserve,<br/>
On every side, whatever sum of a world<br/>
Has been united in a whole. They can<br/>
Indeed, by frequent beating, check a part,<br/>
Till others arriving may fulfil the sum;<br/>
But meanwhile often are they forced to spring<br/>
Rebounding back, and, as they spring, to yield,<br/>
Unto those elements whence a world derives,<br/>
Room and a time for flight, permitting them<br/>
To be from off the massy union borne<br/>
Free and afar. Wherefore, again, again:<br/>
Needs must there come a many for supply;<br/>
And also, that the blows themselves shall be<br/>
Unfailing ever, must there ever be<br/>
An infinite force of matter all sides round.<br/>
<br/>
And in these problems, shrink, my Memmius, far<br/>
From yielding faith to that notorious talk:<br/>
That all things inward to the centre press;<br/>
And thus the nature of the world stands firm<br/>
With never blows from outward, nor can be<br/>
Nowhere disparted—since all height and depth<br/>
Have always inward to the centre pressed<br/>
(If thou art ready to believe that aught<br/>
Itself can rest upon itself ); or that<br/>
The ponderous bodies which be under earth<br/>
Do all press upwards and do come to rest<br/>
Upon the earth, in some way upside down,<br/>
Like to those images of things we see<br/>
At present through the waters. They contend,<br/>
With like procedure, that all breathing things<br/>
Head downward roam about, and yet cannot<br/>
Tumble from earth to realms of sky below,<br/>
No more than these our bodies wing away<br/>
Spontaneously to vaults of sky above;<br/>
That, when those creatures look upon the sun,<br/>
We view the constellations of the night;<br/>
And that with us the seasons of the sky<br/>
They thus alternately divide, and thus<br/>
Do pass the night coequal to our days,<br/>
But a vain error has given these dreams to fools,<br/>
Which they've embraced with reasoning perverse<br/>
For centre none can be where world is still<br/>
Boundless, nor yet, if now a centre were,<br/>
Could aught take there a fixed position more<br/>
Than for some other cause 'tmight be dislodged.<br/>
For all of room and space we call the void<br/>
Must both through centre and non-centre yield<br/>
Alike to weights where'er their motions tend.<br/>
Nor is there any place, where, when they've come,<br/>
Bodies can be at standstill in the void,<br/>
Deprived of force of weight; nor yet may void<br/>
Furnish support to any,—nay, it must,<br/>
True to its bent of nature, still give way.<br/>
Thus in such manner not at all can things<br/>
Be held in union, as if overcome<br/>
By craving for a centre.<br/>
<br/>
But besides,<br/>
Seeing they feign that not all bodies press<br/>
To centre inward, rather only those<br/>
Of earth and water (liquid of the sea,<br/>
And the big billows from the mountain slopes,<br/>
And whatsoever are encased, as 'twere,<br/>
In earthen body), contrariwise, they teach<br/>
How the thin air, and with it the hot fire,<br/>
Is borne asunder from the centre, and how,<br/>
For this all ether quivers with bright stars,<br/>
And the sun's flame along the blue is fed<br/>
(Because the heat, from out the centre flying,<br/>
All gathers there), and how, again, the boughs<br/>
Upon the tree-tops could not sprout their leaves,<br/>
Unless, little by little, from out the earth<br/>
For each were nutriment...<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Lest, after the manner of the winged flames,<br/>
The ramparts of the world should flee away,<br/>
Dissolved amain throughout the mighty void,<br/>
And lest all else should likewise follow after,<br/>
Aye, lest the thundering vaults of heaven should burst<br/>
And splinter upward, and the earth forthwith<br/>
Withdraw from under our feet, and all its bulk,<br/>
Among its mingled wrecks and those of heaven,<br/>
With slipping asunder of the primal seeds,<br/>
Should pass, along the immeasurable inane,<br/>
Away forever, and, that instant, naught<br/>
Of wrack and remnant would be left, beside<br/>
The desolate space, and germs invisible.<br/>
For on whatever side thou deemest first<br/>
The primal bodies lacking, lo, that side<br/>
Will be for things the very door of death:<br/>
Wherethrough the throng of matter all will dash,<br/>
Out and abroad.<br/>
<br/>
These points, if thou wilt ponder,<br/>
Then, with but paltry trouble led along...<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>For one thing after other will grow clear,<br/>
Nor shall the blind night rob thee of the road,<br/>
To hinder thy gaze on nature's Farthest-forth.<br/>
Thus things for things shall kindle torches new.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> BOOK II </h2>
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<br/>
<h2> PROEM </h2>
<p>'Tis sweet, when, down the mighty main, the winds<br/>
Roll up its waste of waters, from the land<br/>
To watch another's labouring anguish far,<br/>
Not that we joyously delight that man<br/>
Should thus be smitten, but because 'tis sweet<br/>
To mark what evils we ourselves be spared;<br/>
'Tis sweet, again, to view the mighty strife<br/>
Of armies embattled yonder o'er the plains,<br/>
Ourselves no sharers in the peril; but naught<br/>
There is more goodly than to hold the high<br/>
Serene plateaus, well fortressed by the wise,<br/>
Whence thou may'st look below on other men<br/>
And see them ev'rywhere wand'ring, all dispersed<br/>
In their lone seeking for the road of life;<br/>
Rivals in genius, or emulous in rank,<br/>
Pressing through days and nights with hugest toil<br/>
For summits of power and mastery of the world.<br/>
O wretched minds of men! O blinded hearts!<br/>
In how great perils, in what darks of life<br/>
Are spent the human years, however brief!—<br/>
O not to see that nature for herself<br/>
Barks after nothing, save that pain keep off,<br/>
Disjoined from the body, and that mind enjoy<br/>
Delightsome feeling, far from care and fear!<br/>
Therefore we see that our corporeal life<br/>
Needs little, altogether, and only such<br/>
As takes the pain away, and can besides<br/>
Strew underneath some number of delights.<br/>
More grateful 'tis at times (for nature craves<br/>
No artifice nor luxury), if forsooth<br/>
There be no golden images of boys<br/>
Along the halls, with right hands holding out<br/>
The lamps ablaze, the lights for evening feasts,<br/>
And if the house doth glitter not with gold<br/>
Nor gleam with silver, and to the lyre resound<br/>
No fretted and gilded ceilings overhead,<br/>
Yet still to lounge with friends in the soft grass<br/>
Beside a river of water, underneath<br/>
A big tree's boughs, and merrily to refresh<br/>
Our frames, with no vast outlay—most of all<br/>
If the weather is laughing and the times of the year<br/>
Besprinkle the green of the grass around with flowers.<br/>
Nor yet the quicker will hot fevers go,<br/>
If on a pictured tapestry thou toss,<br/>
Or purple robe, than if 'tis thine to lie<br/>
Upon the poor man's bedding. Wherefore, since<br/>
Treasure, nor rank, nor glory of a reign<br/>
Avail us naught for this our body, thus<br/>
Reckon them likewise nothing for the mind:<br/>
Save then perchance, when thou beholdest forth<br/>
Thy legions swarming round the Field of Mars,<br/>
Rousing a mimic warfare—either side<br/>
Strengthened with large auxiliaries and horse,<br/>
Alike equipped with arms, alike inspired;<br/>
Or save when also thou beholdest forth<br/>
Thy fleets to swarm, deploying down the sea:<br/>
For then, by such bright circumstance abashed,<br/>
Religion pales and flees thy mind; O then<br/>
The fears of death leave heart so free of care.<br/>
But if we note how all this pomp at last<br/>
Is but a drollery and a mocking sport,<br/>
And of a truth man's dread, with cares at heels,<br/>
Dreads not these sounds of arms, these savage swords<br/>
But among kings and lords of all the world<br/>
Mingles undaunted, nor is overawed<br/>
By gleam of gold nor by the splendour bright<br/>
Of purple robe, canst thou then doubt that this<br/>
Is aught, but power of thinking?—when, besides<br/>
The whole of life but labours in the dark.<br/>
For just as children tremble and fear all<br/>
In the viewless dark, so even we at times<br/>
Dread in the light so many things that be<br/>
No whit more fearsome than what children feign,<br/>
Shuddering, will be upon them in the dark.<br/>
This terror then, this darkness of the mind,<br/>
Not sunrise with its flaring spokes of light,<br/>
Nor glittering arrows of morning can disperse,<br/>
But only nature's aspect and her law.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> ATOMIC MOTIONS </h2>
<p>Now come: I will untangle for thy steps<br/>
Now by what motions the begetting bodies<br/>
Of the world-stuff beget the varied world,<br/>
And then forever resolve it when begot,<br/>
And by what force they are constrained to this,<br/>
And what the speed appointed unto them<br/>
Wherewith to travel down the vast inane:<br/>
Do thou remember to yield thee to my words.<br/>
For truly matter coheres not, crowds not tight,<br/>
Since we behold each thing to wane away,<br/>
And we observe how all flows on and off,<br/>
As 'twere, with age-old time, and from our eyes<br/>
How eld withdraws each object at the end,<br/>
Albeit the sum is seen to bide the same,<br/>
Unharmed, because these motes that leave each thing<br/>
Diminish what they part from, but endow<br/>
With increase those to which in turn they come,<br/>
Constraining these to wither in old age,<br/>
And those to flower at the prime (and yet<br/>
Biding not long among them). Thus the sum<br/>
Forever is replenished, and we live<br/>
As mortals by eternal give and take.<br/>
The nations wax, the nations wane away;<br/>
In a brief space the generations pass,<br/>
And like to runners hand the lamp of life<br/>
One unto other.<br/>
<br/>
But if thou believe<br/>
That the primordial germs of things can stop,<br/>
And in their stopping give new motions birth,<br/>
Afar thou wanderest from the road of truth.<br/>
For since they wander through the void inane,<br/>
All the primordial germs of things must needs<br/>
Be borne along, either by weight their own,<br/>
Or haply by another's blow without.<br/>
For, when, in their incessancy so oft<br/>
They meet and clash, it comes to pass amain<br/>
They leap asunder, face to face: not strange—<br/>
Being most hard, and solid in their weights,<br/>
And naught opposing motion, from behind.<br/>
And that more clearly thou perceive how all<br/>
These mites of matter are darted round about,<br/>
Recall to mind how nowhere in the sum<br/>
Of All exists a bottom,—nowhere is<br/>
A realm of rest for primal bodies; since<br/>
(As amply shown and proved by reason sure)<br/>
Space has no bound nor measure, and extends<br/>
Unmetered forth in all directions round.<br/>
Since this stands certain, thus 'tis out of doubt<br/>
No rest is rendered to the primal bodies<br/>
Along the unfathomable inane; but rather,<br/>
Inveterately plied by motions mixed,<br/>
Some, at their jamming, bound aback and leave<br/>
Huge gaps between, and some from off the blow<br/>
Are hurried about with spaces small between.<br/>
And all which, brought together with slight gaps,<br/>
In more condensed union bound aback,<br/>
Linked by their own all inter-tangled shapes,—<br/>
These form the irrefragable roots of rocks<br/>
And the brute bulks of iron, and what else<br/>
Is of their kind...<br/>
The rest leap far asunder, far recoil,<br/>
Leaving huge gaps between: and these supply<br/>
For us thin air and splendour-lights of the sun.<br/>
And many besides wander the mighty void—<br/>
Cast back from unions of existing things,<br/>
Nowhere accepted in the universe,<br/>
And nowise linked in motions to the rest.<br/>
And of this fact (as I record it here)<br/>
An image, a type goes on before our eyes<br/>
Present each moment; for behold whenever<br/>
The sun's light and the rays, let in, pour down<br/>
Across dark halls of houses: thou wilt see<br/>
The many mites in many a manner mixed<br/>
Amid a void in the very light of the rays,<br/>
And battling on, as in eternal strife,<br/>
And in battalions contending without halt,<br/>
In meetings, partings, harried up and down.<br/>
From this thou mayest conjecture of what sort<br/>
The ceaseless tossing of primordial seeds<br/>
Amid the mightier void—at least so far<br/>
As small affair can for a vaster serve,<br/>
And by example put thee on the spoor<br/>
Of knowledge. For this reason too 'tis fit<br/>
Thou turn thy mind the more unto these bodies<br/>
Which here are witnessed tumbling in the light:<br/>
Namely, because such tumblings are a sign<br/>
That motions also of the primal stuff<br/>
Secret and viewless lurk beneath, behind.<br/>
For thou wilt mark here many a speck, impelled<br/>
By viewless blows, to change its little course,<br/>
And beaten backwards to return again,<br/>
Hither and thither in all directions round.<br/>
Lo, all their shifting movement is of old,<br/>
From the primeval atoms; for the same<br/>
Primordial seeds of things first move of self,<br/>
And then those bodies built of unions small<br/>
And nearest, as it were, unto the powers<br/>
Of the primeval atoms, are stirred up<br/>
By impulse of those atoms' unseen blows,<br/>
And these thereafter goad the next in size:<br/>
Thus motion ascends from the primevals on,<br/>
And stage by stage emerges to our sense,<br/>
Until those objects also move which we<br/>
Can mark in sunbeams, though it not appears<br/>
What blows do urge them.<br/>
<br/>
Herein wonder not<br/>
How 'tis that, while the seeds of things are all<br/>
Moving forever, the sum yet seems to stand<br/>
Supremely still, except in cases where<br/>
A thing shows motion of its frame as whole.<br/>
For far beneath the ken of senses lies<br/>
The nature of those ultimates of the world;<br/>
And so, since those themselves thou canst not see,<br/>
Their motion also must they veil from men—<br/>
For mark, indeed, how things we can see, oft<br/>
Yet hide their motions, when afar from us<br/>
Along the distant landscape. Often thus,<br/>
Upon a hillside will the woolly flocks<br/>
Be cropping their goodly food and creeping about<br/>
Whither the summons of the grass, begemmed<br/>
With the fresh dew, is calling, and the lambs,<br/>
Well filled, are frisking, locking horns in sport:<br/>
Yet all for us seem blurred and blent afar—<br/>
A glint of white at rest on a green hill.<br/>
Again, when mighty legions, marching round,<br/>
Fill all the quarters of the plains below,<br/>
Rousing a mimic warfare, there the sheen<br/>
Shoots up the sky, and all the fields about<br/>
Glitter with brass, and from beneath, a sound<br/>
Goes forth from feet of stalwart soldiery,<br/>
And mountain walls, smote by the shouting, send<br/>
The voices onward to the stars of heaven,<br/>
And hither and thither darts the cavalry,<br/>
And of a sudden down the midmost fields<br/>
Charges with onset stout enough to rock<br/>
The solid earth: and yet some post there is<br/>
Up the high mountains, viewed from which they seem<br/>
To stand—a gleam at rest along the plains.<br/>
<br/>
Now what the speed to matter's atoms given<br/>
Thou mayest in few, my Memmius, learn from this:<br/>
When first the dawn is sprinkling with new light<br/>
The lands, and all the breed of birds abroad<br/>
Flit round the trackless forests, with liquid notes<br/>
Filling the regions along the mellow air,<br/>
We see 'tis forthwith manifest to man<br/>
How suddenly the risen sun is wont<br/>
At such an hour to overspread and clothe<br/>
The whole with its own splendour; but the sun's<br/>
Warm exhalations and this serene light<br/>
Travel not down an empty void; and thus<br/>
They are compelled more slowly to advance,<br/>
Whilst, as it were, they cleave the waves of air;<br/>
Nor one by one travel these particles<br/>
Of the warm exhalations, but are all<br/>
Entangled and enmassed, whereby at once<br/>
Each is restrained by each, and from without<br/>
Checked, till compelled more slowly to advance.<br/>
But the primordial atoms with their old<br/>
Simple solidity, when forth they travel<br/>
Along the empty void, all undelayed<br/>
By aught outside them there, and they, each one<br/>
Being one unit from nature of its parts,<br/>
Are borne to that one place on which they strive<br/>
Still to lay hold, must then, beyond a doubt,<br/>
Outstrip in speed, and be more swiftly borne<br/>
Than light of sun, and over regions rush,<br/>
Of space much vaster, in the self-same time<br/>
The sun's effulgence widens round the sky.<br/>
<br/></p>
<p>Nor to pursue the atoms one by one,<br/>
To see the law whereby each thing goes on.<br/>
But some men, ignorant of matter, think,<br/>
Opposing this, that not without the gods,<br/>
In such adjustment to our human ways,<br/>
Can nature change the seasons of the years,<br/>
And bring to birth the grains and all of else<br/>
To which divine Delight, the guide of life,<br/>
Persuades mortality and leads it on,<br/>
That, through her artful blandishments of love,<br/>
It propagate the generations still,<br/>
Lest humankind should perish. When they feign<br/>
That gods have stablished all things but for man,<br/>
They seem in all ways mightily to lapse<br/>
From reason's truth: for ev'n if ne'er I knew<br/>
What seeds primordial are, yet would I dare<br/>
This to affirm, ev'n from deep judgment based<br/>
Upon the ways and conduct of the skies—<br/>
This to maintain by many a fact besides—<br/>
That in no wise the nature of the world<br/>
For us was builded by a power divine—<br/>
So great the faults it stands encumbered with:<br/>
The which, my Memmius, later on, for thee<br/>
We will clear up. Now as to what remains<br/>
Concerning motions we'll unfold our thought.<br/>
<br/>
Now is the place, meseems, in these affairs<br/>
To prove for thee this too: nothing corporeal<br/>
Of its own force can e'er be upward borne,<br/>
Or upward go—nor let the bodies of flames<br/>
Deceive thee here: for they engendered are<br/>
With urge to upwards, taking thus increase,<br/>
Whereby grow upwards shining grains and trees,<br/>
Though all the weight within them downward bears.<br/>
Nor, when the fires will leap from under round<br/>
The roofs of houses, and swift flame laps up<br/>
Timber and beam, 'tis then to be supposed<br/>
They act of own accord, no force beneath<br/>
To urge them up. 'Tis thus that blood, discharged<br/>
From out our bodies, spurts its jets aloft<br/>
And spatters gore. And hast thou never marked<br/>
With what a force the water will disgorge<br/>
Timber and beam? The deeper, straight and down,<br/>
We push them in, and, many though we be,<br/>
The more we press with main and toil, the more<br/>
The water vomits up and flings them back,<br/>
That, more than half their length, they there emerge,<br/>
Rebounding. Yet we never doubt, meseems,<br/>
That all the weight within them downward bears<br/>
Through empty void. Well, in like manner, flames<br/>
Ought also to be able, when pressed out,<br/>
Through winds of air to rise aloft, even though<br/>
The weight within them strive to draw them down.<br/>
Hast thou not seen, sweeping so far and high,<br/>
The meteors, midnight flambeaus of the sky,<br/>
How after them they draw long trails of flame<br/>
Wherever Nature gives a thoroughfare?<br/>
How stars and constellations drop to earth,<br/>
Seest not? Nay, too, the sun from peak of heaven<br/>
Sheds round to every quarter its large heat,<br/>
And sows the new-ploughed intervales with light:<br/>
Thus also sun's heat downward tends to earth.<br/>
Athwart the rain thou seest the lightning fly;<br/>
Now here, now there, bursting from out the clouds,<br/>
The fires dash zig-zag—and that flaming power<br/>
Falls likewise down to earth.<br/>
<br/>
In these affairs<br/>
We wish thee also well aware of this:<br/>
The atoms, as their own weight bears them down<br/>
Plumb through the void, at scarce determined times,<br/>
In scarce determined places, from their course<br/>
Decline a little—call it, so to speak,<br/>
Mere changed trend. For were it not their wont<br/>
Thuswise to swerve, down would they fall, each one,<br/>
Like drops of rain, through the unbottomed void;<br/>
And then collisions ne'er could be nor blows<br/>
Among the primal elements; and thus<br/>
Nature would never have created aught.<br/>
<br/>
But, if perchance be any that believe<br/>
The heavier bodies, as more swiftly borne<br/>
Plumb down the void, are able from above<br/>
To strike the lighter, thus engendering blows<br/>
Able to cause those procreant motions, far<br/>
From highways of true reason they retire.<br/>
For whatsoever through the waters fall,<br/>
Or through thin air, must quicken their descent,<br/>
Each after its weight—on this account, because<br/>
Both bulk of water and the subtle air<br/>
By no means can retard each thing alike,<br/>
But give more quick before the heavier weight;<br/>
But contrariwise the empty void cannot,<br/>
On any side, at any time, to aught<br/>
Oppose resistance, but will ever yield,<br/>
True to its bent of nature. Wherefore all,<br/>
With equal speed, though equal not in weight,<br/>
Must rush, borne downward through the still inane.<br/>
Thus ne'er at all have heavier from above<br/>
Been swift to strike the lighter, gendering strokes<br/>
Which cause those divers motions, by whose means<br/>
Nature transacts her work. And so I say,<br/>
The atoms must a little swerve at times—<br/>
But only the least, lest we should seem to feign<br/>
Motions oblique, and fact refute us there.<br/>
For this we see forthwith is manifest:<br/>
Whatever the weight, it can't obliquely go,<br/>
Down on its headlong journey from above,<br/>
At least so far as thou canst mark; but who<br/>
Is there can mark by sense that naught can swerve<br/>
At all aside from off its road's straight line?<br/>
<br/>
Again, if ev'r all motions are co-linked,<br/>
And from the old ever arise the new<br/>
In fixed order, and primordial seeds<br/>
Produce not by their swerving some new start<br/>
Of motion to sunder the covenants of fate,<br/>
That cause succeed not cause from everlasting,<br/>
Whence this free will for creatures o'er the lands,<br/>
Whence is it wrested from the fates,—this will<br/>
Whereby we step right forward where desire<br/>
Leads each man on, whereby the same we swerve<br/>
In motions, not as at some fixed time,<br/>
Nor at some fixed line of space, but where<br/>
The mind itself has urged? For out of doubt<br/>
In these affairs 'tis each man's will itself<br/>
That gives the start, and hence throughout our limbs<br/>
Incipient motions are diffused. Again,<br/>
Dost thou not see, when, at a point of time,<br/>
The bars are opened, how the eager strength<br/>
Of horses cannot forward break as soon<br/>
As pants their mind to do? For it behooves<br/>
That all the stock of matter, through the frame,<br/>
Be roused, in order that, through every joint,<br/>
Aroused, it press and follow mind's desire;<br/>
So thus thou seest initial motion's gendered<br/>
From out the heart, aye, verily, proceeds<br/>
First from the spirit's will, whence at the last<br/>
'Tis given forth through joints and body entire.<br/>
Quite otherwise it is, when forth we move,<br/>
Impelled by a blow of another's mighty powers<br/>
And mighty urge; for then 'tis clear enough<br/>
All matter of our total body goes,<br/>
Hurried along, against our own desire—<br/>
Until the will has pulled upon the reins<br/>
And checked it back, throughout our members all;<br/>
At whose arbitrament indeed sometimes<br/>
The stock of matter's forced to change its path,<br/>
Throughout our members and throughout our joints,<br/>
And, after being forward cast, to be<br/>
Reined up, whereat it settles back again.<br/>
So seest thou not, how, though external force<br/>
Drive men before, and often make them move,<br/>
Onward against desire, and headlong snatched,<br/>
Yet is there something in these breasts of ours<br/>
Strong to combat, strong to withstand the same?—<br/>
Wherefore no less within the primal seeds<br/>
Thou must admit, besides all blows and weight,<br/>
Some other cause of motion, whence derives<br/>
This power in us inborn, of some free act.—<br/>
Since naught from nothing can become, we see.<br/>
For weight prevents all things should come to pass<br/>
Through blows, as 'twere, by some external force;<br/>
But that man's mind itself in all it does<br/>
Hath not a fixed necessity within,<br/>
Nor is not, like a conquered thing, compelled<br/>
To bear and suffer,—this state comes to man<br/>
From that slight swervement of the elements<br/>
In no fixed line of space, in no fixed time.<br/>
<br/>
Nor ever was the stock of stuff more crammed,<br/>
Nor ever, again, sundered by bigger gaps:<br/>
For naught gives increase and naught takes away;<br/>
On which account, just as they move to-day,<br/>
The elemental bodies moved of old<br/>
And shall the same hereafter evermore.<br/>
And what was wont to be begot of old<br/>
Shall be begotten under selfsame terms<br/>
And grow and thrive in power, so far as given<br/>
To each by Nature's changeless, old decrees.<br/>
The sum of things there is no power can change,<br/>
For naught exists outside, to which can flee<br/>
Out of the world matter of any kind,<br/>
Nor forth from which a fresh supply can spring,<br/>
Break in upon the founded world, and change<br/>
Whole nature of things, and turn their motions about.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ATOMIC FORMS AND THEIR COMBINATIONS </h2>
<p>Now come, and next hereafter apprehend<br/>
What sorts, how vastly different in form,<br/>
How varied in multitudinous shapes they are—<br/>
These old beginnings of the universe;<br/>
Not in the sense that only few are furnished<br/>
With one like form, but rather not at all<br/>
In general have they likeness each with each,<br/>
No marvel: since the stock of them's so great<br/>
That there's no end (as I have taught) nor sum,<br/>
They must indeed not one and all be marked<br/>
By equal outline and by shape the same.<br/>
<br/></p>
<p>Moreover, humankind, and the mute flocks<br/>
Of scaly creatures swimming in the streams,<br/>
And joyous herds around, and all the wild,<br/>
And all the breeds of birds—both those that teem<br/>
In gladsome regions of the water-haunts,<br/>
About the river-banks and springs and pools,<br/>
And those that throng, flitting from tree to tree,<br/>
Through trackless woods—Go, take which one thou wilt,<br/>
In any kind: thou wilt discover still<br/>
Each from the other still unlike in shape.<br/>
Nor in no other wise could offspring know<br/>
Mother, nor mother offspring—which we see<br/>
They yet can do, distinguished one from other,<br/>
No less than human beings, by clear signs.<br/>
Thus oft before fair temples of the gods,<br/>
Beside the incense-burning altars slain,<br/>
Drops down the yearling calf, from out its breast<br/>
Breathing warm streams of blood; the orphaned mother,<br/>
Ranging meanwhile green woodland pastures round,<br/>
Knows well the footprints, pressed by cloven hoofs,<br/>
With eyes regarding every spot about,<br/>
For sight somewhere of youngling gone from her;<br/>
And, stopping short, filleth the leafy lanes<br/>
With her complaints; and oft she seeks again<br/>
Within the stall, pierced by her yearning still.<br/>
Nor tender willows, nor dew-quickened grass,<br/>
Nor the loved streams that glide along low banks,<br/>
Can lure her mind and turn the sudden pain;<br/>
Nor other shapes of calves that graze thereby<br/>
Distract her mind or lighten pain the least—<br/>
So keen her search for something known and hers.<br/>
Moreover, tender kids with bleating throats<br/>
Do know their horned dams, and butting lambs<br/>
The flocks of sheep, and thus they patter on,<br/>
Unfailingly each to its proper teat,<br/>
As nature intends. Lastly, with any grain,<br/>
Thou'lt see that no one kernel in one kind<br/>
Is so far like another, that there still<br/>
Is not in shapes some difference running through.<br/>
By a like law we see how earth is pied<br/>
With shells and conchs, where, with soft waves, the sea<br/>
Beats on the thirsty sands of curving shores.<br/>
Wherefore again, again, since seeds of things<br/>
Exist by nature, nor were wrought with hands<br/>
After a fixed pattern of one other,<br/>
They needs must flitter to and fro with shapes<br/>
In types dissimilar to one another.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Easy enough by thought of mind to solve<br/>
Why fires of lightning more can penetrate<br/>
Than these of ours from pitch-pine born on earth.<br/>
For thou canst say lightning's celestial fire,<br/>
So subtle, is formed of figures finer far,<br/>
And passes thus through holes which this our fire,<br/>
Born from the wood, created from the pine,<br/>
Cannot. Again, light passes through the horn<br/>
On the lantern's side, while rain is dashed away.<br/>
And why?—unless those bodies of light should be<br/>
Finer than those of water's genial showers.<br/>
We see how quickly through a colander<br/>
The wines will flow; how, on the other hand,<br/>
The sluggish olive-oil delays: no doubt,<br/>
Because 'tis wrought of elements more large,<br/>
Or else more crook'd and intertangled. Thus<br/>
It comes that the primordials cannot be<br/>
So suddenly sundered one from other, and seep,<br/>
One through each several hole of anything.<br/>
<br/>
And note, besides, that liquor of honey or milk<br/>
Yields in the mouth agreeable taste to tongue,<br/>
Whilst nauseous wormwood, pungent centaury,<br/>
With their foul flavour set the lips awry;<br/>
Thus simple 'tis to see that whatsoever<br/>
Can touch the senses pleasingly are made<br/>
Of smooth and rounded elements, whilst those<br/>
Which seem the bitter and the sharp, are held<br/>
Entwined by elements more crook'd, and so<br/>
Are wont to tear their ways into our senses,<br/>
And rend our body as they enter in.<br/>
In short all good to sense, all bad to touch,<br/>
Being up-built of figures so unlike,<br/>
Are mutually at strife—lest thou suppose<br/>
That the shrill rasping of a squeaking saw<br/>
Consists of elements as smooth as song<br/>
Which, waked by nimble fingers, on the strings<br/>
The sweet musicians fashion; or suppose<br/>
That same-shaped atoms through men's nostrils pierce<br/>
When foul cadavers burn, as when the stage<br/>
Is with Cilician saffron sprinkled fresh,<br/>
And the altar near exhales Panchaean scent;<br/>
Or hold as of like seed the goodly hues<br/>
Of things which feast our eyes, as those which sting<br/>
Against the smarting pupil and draw tears,<br/>
Or show, with gruesome aspect, grim and vile.<br/>
For never a shape which charms our sense was made<br/>
Without some elemental smoothness; whilst<br/>
Whate'er is harsh and irksome has been framed<br/>
Still with some roughness in its elements.<br/>
Some, too, there are which justly are supposed<br/>
To be nor smooth nor altogether hooked,<br/>
With bended barbs, but slightly angled-out,<br/>
To tickle rather than to wound the sense—<br/>
And of which sort is the salt tartar of wine<br/>
And flavours of the gummed elecampane.<br/>
Again, that glowing fire and icy rime<br/>
Are fanged with teeth unlike whereby to sting<br/>
Our body's sense, the touch of each gives proof.<br/>
For touch—by sacred majesties of Gods!—<br/>
Touch is indeed the body's only sense—<br/>
Be't that something in-from-outward works,<br/>
Be't that something in the body born<br/>
Wounds, or delighteth as it passes out<br/>
Along the procreant paths of Aphrodite;<br/>
Or be't the seeds by some collision whirl<br/>
Disordered in the body and confound<br/>
By tumult and confusion all the sense—<br/>
As thou mayst find, if haply with the hand<br/>
Thyself thou strike thy body's any part.<br/>
On which account, the elemental forms<br/>
Must differ widely, as enabled thus<br/>
To cause diverse sensations.<br/>
<br/>
And, again,<br/>
What seems to us the hardened and condensed<br/>
Must be of atoms among themselves more hooked,<br/>
Be held compacted deep within, as 'twere<br/>
By branch-like atoms—of which sort the chief<br/>
Are diamond stones, despisers of all blows,<br/>
And stalwart flint and strength of solid iron,<br/>
And brazen bars, which, budging hard in locks,<br/>
Do grate and scream. But what are liquid, formed<br/>
Of fluid body, they indeed must be<br/>
Of elements more smooth and round—because<br/>
Their globules severally will not cohere:<br/>
To suck the poppy-seeds from palm of hand<br/>
Is quite as easy as drinking water down,<br/>
And they, once struck, roll like unto the same.<br/>
But that thou seest among the things that flow<br/>
Some bitter, as the brine of ocean is,<br/>
Is not the least a marvel...<br/>
For since 'tis fluid, smooth its atoms are<br/>
And round, with painful rough ones mixed therein;<br/>
Yet need not these be held together hooked:<br/>
In fact, though rough, they're globular besides,<br/>
Able at once to roll, and rasp the sense.<br/>
And that the more thou mayst believe me here,<br/>
That with smooth elements are mixed the rough<br/>
(Whence Neptune's salt astringent body comes),<br/>
There is a means to separate the twain,<br/>
And thereupon dividedly to see<br/>
How the sweet water, after filtering through<br/>
So often underground, flows freshened forth<br/>
Into some hollow; for it leaves above<br/>
The primal germs of nauseating brine,<br/>
Since cling the rough more readily in earth.<br/>
Lastly, whatso thou markest to disperse<br/>
Upon the instant—smoke, and cloud, and flame—<br/>
Must not (even though not all of smooth and round)<br/>
Be yet co-linked with atoms intertwined,<br/>
That thus they can, without together cleaving,<br/>
So pierce our body and so bore the rocks.<br/>
Whatever we see...<br/>
Given to senses, that thou must perceive<br/>
They're not from linked but pointed elements.<br/>
<br/>
The which now having taught, I will go on<br/>
To bind thereto a fact to this allied<br/>
And drawing from this its proof: these primal germs<br/>
Vary, yet only with finite tale of shapes.<br/>
For were these shapes quite infinite, some seeds<br/>
Would have a body of infinite increase.<br/>
For in one seed, in one small frame of any,<br/>
The shapes can't vary from one another much.<br/>
Assume, we'll say, that of three minim parts<br/>
Consist the primal bodies, or add a few:<br/>
When, now, by placing all these parts of one<br/>
At top and bottom, changing lefts and rights,<br/>
Thou hast with every kind of shift found out<br/>
What the aspect of shape of its whole body<br/>
Each new arrangement gives, for what remains,<br/>
If thou percase wouldst vary its old shapes,<br/>
New parts must then be added; follows next,<br/>
If thou percase wouldst vary still its shapes,<br/>
That by like logic each arrangement still<br/>
Requires its increment of other parts.<br/>
Ergo, an augmentation of its frame<br/>
Follows upon each novelty of forms.<br/>
Wherefore, it cannot be thou'lt undertake<br/>
That seeds have infinite differences in form,<br/>
Lest thus thou forcest some indeed to be<br/>
Of an immeasurable immensity—<br/>
Which I have taught above cannot be proved.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>And now for thee barbaric robes, and gleam<br/>
Of Meliboean purple, touched with dye<br/>
Of the Thessalian shell...<br/>
The peacock's golden generations, stained<br/>
With spotted gaieties, would lie o'erthrown<br/>
By some new colour of new things more bright;<br/>
The odour of myrrh and savours of honey despised;<br/>
The swan's old lyric, and Apollo's hymns,<br/>
Once modulated on the many chords,<br/>
Would likewise sink o'ermastered and be mute:<br/>
For, lo, a somewhat, finer than the rest,<br/>
Would be arising evermore. So, too,<br/>
Into some baser part might all retire,<br/>
Even as we said to better might they come:<br/>
For, lo, a somewhat, loathlier than the rest<br/>
To nostrils, ears, and eyes, and taste of tongue,<br/>
Would then, by reasoning reversed, be there.<br/>
Since 'tis not so, but unto things are given<br/>
Their fixed limitations which do bound<br/>
Their sum on either side, 'tmust be confessed<br/>
That matter, too, by finite tale of shapes<br/>
Does differ. Again, from earth's midsummer heats<br/>
Unto the icy hoar-frosts of the year<br/>
The forward path is fixed, and by like law<br/>
O'ertravelled backwards at the dawn of spring.<br/>
For each degree of hot, and each of cold,<br/>
And the half-warm, all filling up the sum<br/>
In due progression, lie, my Memmius, there<br/>
Betwixt the two extremes: the things create<br/>
Must differ, therefore, by a finite change,<br/>
Since at each end marked off they ever are<br/>
By fixed point—on one side plagued by flames<br/>
And on the other by congealing frosts.<br/>
<br/>
The which now having taught, I will go on<br/>
To bind thereto a fact to this allied<br/>
And drawing from this its proof: those primal germs<br/>
Which have been fashioned all of one like shape<br/>
Are infinite in tale; for, since the forms<br/>
Themselves are finite in divergences,<br/>
Then those which are alike will have to be<br/>
Infinite, else the sum of stuff remains<br/>
A finite—what I've proved is not the fact,<br/>
Showing in verse how corpuscles of stuff,<br/>
From everlasting and to-day the same,<br/>
Uphold the sum of things, all sides around<br/>
By old succession of unending blows.<br/>
For though thou view'st some beasts to be more rare,<br/>
And mark'st in them a less prolific stock,<br/>
Yet in another region, in lands remote,<br/>
That kind abounding may make up the count;<br/>
Even as we mark among the four-foot kind<br/>
Snake-handed elephants, whose thousands wall<br/>
With ivory ramparts India about,<br/>
That her interiors cannot entered be—<br/>
So big her count of brutes of which we see<br/>
Such few examples. Or suppose, besides,<br/>
We feign some thing, one of its kind and sole<br/>
With body born, to which is nothing like<br/>
In all the lands: yet now unless shall be<br/>
An infinite count of matter out of which<br/>
Thus to conceive and bring it forth to life,<br/>
It cannot be created and—what's more—<br/>
It cannot take its food and get increase.<br/>
Yea, if through all the world in finite tale<br/>
Be tossed the procreant bodies of one thing,<br/>
Whence, then, and where in what mode, by what power,<br/>
Shall they to meeting come together there,<br/>
In such vast ocean of matter and tumult strange?—<br/>
No means they have of joining into one.<br/>
But, just as, after mighty ship-wrecks piled,<br/>
The mighty main is wont to scatter wide<br/>
The rowers' banks, the ribs, the yards, the prow,<br/>
The masts and swimming oars, so that afar<br/>
Along all shores of lands are seen afloat<br/>
The carven fragments of the rended poop,<br/>
Giving a lesson to mortality<br/>
To shun the ambush of the faithless main,<br/>
The violence and the guile, and trust it not<br/>
At any hour, however much may smile<br/>
The crafty enticements of the placid deep:<br/>
Exactly thus, if once thou holdest true<br/>
That certain seeds are finite in their tale,<br/>
The various tides of matter, then, must needs<br/>
Scatter them flung throughout the ages all,<br/>
So that not ever can they join, as driven<br/>
Together into union, nor remain<br/>
In union, nor with increment can grow—<br/>
But facts in proof are manifest for each:<br/>
Things can be both begotten and increase.<br/>
'Tis therefore manifest that primal germs,<br/>
Are infinite in any class thou wilt—<br/>
From whence is furnished matter for all things.<br/>
<br/>
Nor can those motions that bring death prevail<br/>
Forever, nor eternally entomb<br/>
The welfare of the world; nor, further, can<br/>
Those motions that give birth to things and growth<br/>
Keep them forever when created there.<br/>
Thus the long war, from everlasting waged,<br/>
With equal strife among the elements<br/>
Goes on and on. Now here, now there, prevail<br/>
The vital forces of the world—or fall.<br/>
Mixed with the funeral is the wildered wail<br/>
Of infants coming to the shores of light:<br/>
No night a day, no dawn a night hath followed<br/>
That heard not, mingling with the small birth-cries,<br/>
The wild laments, companions old of death<br/>
And the black rites.<br/>
<br/>
This, too, in these affairs<br/>
'Tis fit thou hold well sealed, and keep consigned<br/>
With no forgetting brain: nothing there is<br/>
Whose nature is apparent out of hand<br/>
That of one kind of elements consists—<br/>
Nothing there is that's not of mixed seed.<br/>
And whatsoe'er possesses in itself<br/>
More largely many powers and properties<br/>
Shows thus that here within itself there are<br/>
The largest number of kinds and differing shapes<br/>
Of elements. And, chief of all, the earth<br/>
Hath in herself first bodies whence the springs,<br/>
Rolling chill waters, renew forevermore<br/>
The unmeasured main; hath whence the fires arise—<br/>
For burns in many a spot her flamed crust,<br/>
Whilst the impetuous Aetna raves indeed<br/>
From more profounder fires—and she, again,<br/>
Hath in herself the seed whence she can raise<br/>
The shining grains and gladsome trees for men;<br/>
Whence, also, rivers, fronds, and gladsome pastures<br/>
Can she supply for mountain-roaming beasts.<br/>
Wherefore great mother of gods, and mother of beasts,<br/>
And parent of man hath she alone been named.<br/>
<br/>
Her hymned the old and learned bards of Greece<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Seated in chariot o'er the realms of air<br/>
To drive her team of lions, teaching thus<br/>
That the great earth hangs poised and cannot lie<br/>
Resting on other earth. Unto her car<br/>
They've yoked the wild beasts, since a progeny,<br/>
However savage, must be tamed and chid<br/>
By care of parents. They have girt about<br/>
With turret-crown the summit of her head,<br/>
Since, fortressed in her goodly strongholds high,<br/>
'Tis she sustains the cities; now, adorned<br/>
With that same token, to-day is carried forth,<br/>
With solemn awe through many a mighty land,<br/>
The image of that mother, the divine.<br/>
Her the wide nations, after antique rite,<br/>
Do name Idaean Mother, giving her<br/>
Escort of Phrygian bands, since first, they say,<br/>
From out those regions 'twas that grain began<br/>
Through all the world. To her do they assign<br/>
The Galli, the emasculate, since thus<br/>
They wish to show that men who violate<br/>
The majesty of the mother and have proved<br/>
Ingrate to parents are to be adjudged<br/>
Unfit to give unto the shores of light<br/>
A living progeny. The Galli come:<br/>
And hollow cymbals, tight-skinned tambourines<br/>
Resound around to bangings of their hands;<br/>
The fierce horns threaten with a raucous bray;<br/>
The tubed pipe excites their maddened minds<br/>
In Phrygian measures; they bear before them knives,<br/>
Wild emblems of their frenzy, which have power<br/>
The rabble's ingrate heads and impious hearts<br/>
To panic with terror of the goddess' might.<br/>
And so, when through the mighty cities borne,<br/>
She blesses man with salutations mute,<br/>
They strew the highway of her journeyings<br/>
With coin of brass and silver, gifting her<br/>
With alms and largesse, and shower her and shade<br/>
With flowers of roses falling like the snow<br/>
Upon the Mother and her companion-bands.<br/>
Here is an armed troop, the which by Greeks<br/>
Are called the Phrygian Curetes. Since<br/>
Haply among themselves they use to play<br/>
In games of arms and leap in measure round<br/>
With bloody mirth and by their nodding shake<br/>
The terrorizing crests upon their heads,<br/>
This is the armed troop that represents<br/>
The arm'd Dictaean Curetes, who, in Crete,<br/>
As runs the story, whilom did out-drown<br/>
That infant cry of Zeus, what time their band,<br/>
Young boys, in a swift dance around the boy,<br/>
To measured step beat with the brass on brass,<br/>
That Saturn might not get him for his jaws,<br/>
And give its mother an eternal wound<br/>
Along her heart. And 'tis on this account<br/>
That armed they escort the mighty Mother,<br/>
Or else because they signify by this<br/>
That she, the goddess, teaches men to be<br/>
Eager with armed valour to defend<br/>
Their motherland, and ready to stand forth,<br/>
The guard and glory of their parents' years.<br/>
A tale, however beautifully wrought,<br/>
That's wide of reason by a long remove:<br/>
For all the gods must of themselves enjoy<br/>
Immortal aeons and supreme repose,<br/>
Withdrawn from our affairs, detached, afar:<br/>
Immune from peril and immune from pain,<br/>
Themselves abounding in riches of their own,<br/>
Needing not us, they are not touched by wrath<br/>
They are not taken by service or by gift.<br/>
Truly is earth insensate for all time;<br/>
But, by obtaining germs of many things,<br/>
In many a way she brings the many forth<br/>
Into the light of sun. And here, whoso<br/>
Decides to call the ocean Neptune, or<br/>
The grain-crop Ceres, and prefers to abuse<br/>
The name of Bacchus rather than pronounce<br/>
The liquor's proper designation, him<br/>
Let us permit to go on calling earth<br/>
Mother of Gods, if only he will spare<br/>
To taint his soul with foul religion.<br/>
So, too, the wooly flocks, and horned kine,<br/>
And brood of battle-eager horses, grazing<br/>
Often together along one grassy plain,<br/>
Under the cope of one blue sky, and slaking<br/>
From out one stream of water each its thirst,<br/>
All live their lives with face and form unlike,<br/>
Keeping the parents' nature, parents' habits,<br/>
Which, kind by kind, through ages they repeat.<br/>
So great in any sort of herb thou wilt,<br/>
So great again in any river of earth<br/>
Are the distinct diversities of matter.<br/>
Hence, further, every creature—any one<br/>
From out them all—compounded is the same<br/>
Of bones, blood, veins, heat, moisture, flesh, and thews—<br/>
All differing vastly in their forms, and built<br/>
Of elements dissimilar in shape.<br/>
Again, all things by fire consumed ablaze,<br/>
Within their frame lay up, if naught besides,<br/>
At least those atoms whence derives their power<br/>
To throw forth fire and send out light from under,<br/>
To shoot the sparks and scatter embers wide.<br/>
If, with like reasoning of mind, all else<br/>
Thou traverse through, thou wilt discover thus<br/>
That in their frame the seeds of many things<br/>
They hide, and divers shapes of seeds contain.<br/>
Further, thou markest much, to which are given<br/>
Along together colour and flavour and smell,<br/>
Among which, chief, are most burnt offerings.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Thus must they be of divers shapes composed.<br/>
A smell of scorching enters in our frame<br/>
Where the bright colour from the dye goes not;<br/>
And colour in one way, flavour in quite another<br/>
Works inward to our senses—so mayst see<br/>
They differ too in elemental shapes.<br/>
Thus unlike forms into one mass combine,<br/>
And things exist by intermixed seed.<br/>
<br/>
But still 'tmust not be thought that in all ways<br/>
All things can be conjoined; for then wouldst view<br/>
Portents begot about thee every side:<br/>
Hulks of mankind half brute astarting up,<br/>
At times big branches sprouting from man's trunk,<br/>
Limbs of a sea-beast to a land-beast knit,<br/>
And nature along the all-producing earth<br/>
Feeding those dire Chimaeras breathing flame<br/>
From hideous jaws—Of which 'tis simple fact<br/>
That none have been begot; because we see<br/>
All are from fixed seed and fixed dam<br/>
Engendered and so function as to keep<br/>
Throughout their growth their own ancestral type.<br/>
This happens surely by a fixed law:<br/>
For from all food-stuff, when once eaten down,<br/>
Go sundered atoms, suited to each creature,<br/>
Throughout their bodies, and, conjoining there,<br/>
Produce the proper motions; but we see<br/>
How, contrariwise, nature upon the ground<br/>
Throws off those foreign to their frame; and many<br/>
With viewless bodies from their bodies fly,<br/>
By blows impelled—those impotent to join<br/>
To any part, or, when inside, to accord<br/>
And to take on the vital motions there.<br/>
But think not, haply, living forms alone<br/>
Are bound by these laws: they distinguished all.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>For just as all things of creation are,<br/>
In their whole nature, each to each unlike,<br/>
So must their atoms be in shape unlike—<br/>
Not since few only are fashioned of like form,<br/>
But since they all, as general rule, are not<br/>
The same as all. Nay, here in these our verses,<br/>
Elements many, common to many words,<br/>
Thou seest, though yet 'tis needful to confess<br/>
The words and verses differ, each from each,<br/>
Compounded out of different elements—<br/>
Not since few only, as common letters, run<br/>
Through all the words, or no two words are made,<br/>
One and the other, from all like elements,<br/>
But since they all, as general rule, are not<br/>
The same as all. Thus, too, in other things,<br/>
Whilst many germs common to many things<br/>
There are, yet they, combined among themselves,<br/>
Can form new wholes to others quite unlike.<br/>
Thus fairly one may say that humankind,<br/>
The grains, the gladsome trees, are all made up<br/>
Of different atoms. Further, since the seeds<br/>
Are different, difference must there also be<br/>
In intervening spaces, thoroughfares,<br/>
Connections, weights, blows, clashings, motions, all<br/>
Which not alone distinguish living forms,<br/>
But sunder earth's whole ocean from the lands,<br/>
And hold all heaven from the lands away.<br/></p>
<p>ABSENCE OF SECONDARY QUALITIES</p>
<p>Now come, this wisdom by my sweet toil sought<br/>
Look thou perceive, lest haply thou shouldst guess<br/>
That the white objects shining to thine eyes<br/>
Are gendered of white atoms, or the black<br/>
Of a black seed; or yet believe that aught<br/>
That's steeped in any hue should take its dye<br/>
From bits of matter tinct with hue the same.<br/>
For matter's bodies own no hue the least—<br/>
Or like to objects or, again, unlike.<br/>
But, if percase it seem to thee that mind<br/>
Itself can dart no influence of its own<br/>
Into these bodies, wide thou wand'rest off.<br/>
For since the blind-born, who have ne'er surveyed<br/>
The light of sun, yet recognise by touch<br/>
Things that from birth had ne'er a hue for them,<br/>
'Tis thine to know that bodies can be brought<br/>
No less unto the ken of our minds too,<br/>
Though yet those bodies with no dye be smeared.<br/>
Again, ourselves whatever in the dark<br/>
We touch, the same we do not find to be<br/>
Tinctured with any colour.<br/>
<br/>
Now that here<br/>
I win the argument, I next will teach<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Now, every colour changes, none except,<br/>
And every...<br/>
Which the primordials ought nowise to do.<br/>
Since an immutable somewhat must remain,<br/>
Lest all things utterly be brought to naught.<br/>
For change of anything from out its bounds<br/>
Means instant death of that which was before.<br/>
Wherefore be mindful not to stain with colour<br/>
The seeds of things, lest things return for thee<br/>
All utterly to naught.<br/>
<br/>
But now, if seeds<br/>
Receive no property of colour, and yet<br/>
Be still endowed with variable forms<br/>
From which all kinds of colours they beget<br/>
And vary (by reason that ever it matters much<br/>
With what seeds, and in what positions joined,<br/>
And what the motions that they give and get),<br/>
Forthwith most easily thou mayst devise<br/>
Why what was black of hue an hour ago<br/>
Can of a sudden like the marble gleam,—<br/>
As ocean, when the high winds have upheaved<br/>
Its level plains, is changed to hoary waves<br/>
Of marble whiteness: for, thou mayst declare,<br/>
That, when the thing we often see as black<br/>
Is in its matter then commixed anew,<br/>
Some atoms rearranged, and some withdrawn,<br/>
And added some, 'tis seen forthwith to turn<br/>
Glowing and white. But if of azure seeds<br/>
Consist the level waters of the deep,<br/>
They could in nowise whiten: for however<br/>
Thou shakest azure seeds, the same can never<br/>
Pass into marble hue. But, if the seeds—<br/>
Which thus produce the ocean's one pure sheen—<br/>
Be now with one hue, now another dyed,<br/>
As oft from alien forms and divers shapes<br/>
A cube's produced all uniform in shape,<br/>
'Twould be but natural, even as in the cube<br/>
We see the forms to be dissimilar,<br/>
That thus we'd see in brightness of the deep<br/>
(Or in whatever one pure sheen thou wilt)<br/>
Colours diverse and all dissimilar.<br/>
Besides, the unlike shapes don't thwart the least<br/>
The whole in being externally a cube;<br/>
But differing hues of things do block and keep<br/>
The whole from being of one resultant hue.<br/>
Then, too, the reason which entices us<br/>
At times to attribute colours to the seeds<br/>
Falls quite to pieces, since white things are not<br/>
Create from white things, nor are black from black,<br/>
But evermore they are create from things<br/>
Of divers colours. Verily, the white<br/>
Will rise more readily, is sooner born<br/>
Out of no colour, than of black or aught<br/>
Which stands in hostile opposition thus.<br/>
<br/>
Besides, since colours cannot be, sans light,<br/>
And the primordials come not forth to light,<br/>
'Tis thine to know they are not clothed with colour—<br/>
Truly, what kind of colour could there be<br/>
In the viewless dark? Nay, in the light itself<br/>
A colour changes, gleaming variedly,<br/>
When smote by vertical or slanting ray.<br/>
Thus in the sunlight shows the down of doves<br/>
That circles, garlanding, the nape and throat:<br/>
Now it is ruddy with a bright gold-bronze,<br/>
Now, by a strange sensation it becomes<br/>
Green-emerald blended with the coral-red.<br/>
The peacock's tail, filled with the copious light,<br/>
Changes its colours likewise, when it turns.<br/>
Wherefore, since by some blow of light begot,<br/>
Without such blow these colours can't become.<br/>
<br/>
And since the pupil of the eye receives<br/>
Within itself one kind of blow, when said<br/>
To feel a white hue, then another kind,<br/>
When feeling a black or any other hue,<br/>
And since it matters nothing with what hue<br/>
The things thou touchest be perchance endowed,<br/>
But rather with what sort of shape equipped,<br/>
'Tis thine to know the atoms need not colour,<br/>
But render forth sensations, as of touch,<br/>
That vary with their varied forms.<br/>
<br/>
Besides,<br/>
Since special shapes have not a special colour,<br/>
And all formations of the primal germs<br/>
Can be of any sheen thou wilt, why, then,<br/>
Are not those objects which are of them made<br/>
Suffused, each kind with colours of every kind?<br/>
For then 'twere meet that ravens, as they fly,<br/>
Should dartle from white pinions a white sheen,<br/>
Or swans turn black from seed of black, or be<br/>
Of any single varied dye thou wilt.<br/>
<br/>
Again, the more an object's rent to bits,<br/>
The more thou see its colour fade away<br/>
Little by little till 'tis quite extinct;<br/>
As happens when the gaudy linen's picked<br/>
Shred after shred away: the purple there,<br/>
Phoenician red, most brilliant of all dyes,<br/>
Is lost asunder, ravelled thread by thread;<br/>
Hence canst perceive the fragments die away<br/>
From out their colour, long ere they depart<br/>
Back to the old primordials of things.<br/>
And, last, since thou concedest not all bodies<br/>
Send out a voice or smell, it happens thus<br/>
That not to all thou givest sounds and smells.<br/>
So, too, since we behold not all with eyes,<br/>
'Tis thine to know some things there are as much<br/>
Orphaned of colour, as others without smell,<br/>
And reft of sound; and those the mind alert<br/>
No less can apprehend than it can mark<br/>
The things that lack some other qualities.<br/>
<br/>
But think not haply that the primal bodies<br/>
Remain despoiled alone of colour: so,<br/>
Are they from warmth dissevered and from cold<br/>
And from hot exhalations; and they move,<br/>
Both sterile of sound and dry of juice; and throw<br/>
Not any odour from their proper bodies.<br/>
Just as, when undertaking to prepare<br/>
A liquid balm of myrrh and marjoram,<br/>
And flower of nard, which to our nostrils breathes<br/>
Odour of nectar, first of all behooves<br/>
Thou seek, as far as find thou may and can,<br/>
The inodorous olive-oil (which never sends<br/>
One whiff of scent to nostrils), that it may<br/>
The least debauch and ruin with sharp tang<br/>
The odorous essence with its body mixed<br/>
And in it seethed. And on the same account<br/>
The primal germs of things must not be thought<br/>
To furnish colour in begetting things,<br/>
Nor sound, since pow'rless they to send forth aught<br/>
From out themselves, nor any flavour, too,<br/>
Nor cold, nor exhalation hot or warm.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>The rest; yet since these things are mortal all—<br/>
The pliant mortal, with a body soft;<br/>
The brittle mortal, with a crumbling frame;<br/>
The hollow with a porous-all must be<br/>
Disjoined from the primal elements,<br/>
If still we wish under the world to lay<br/>
Immortal ground-works, whereupon may rest<br/>
The sum of weal and safety, lest for thee<br/>
All things return to nothing utterly.<br/>
<br/>
Now, too: whate'er we see possessing sense<br/>
Must yet confessedly be stablished all<br/>
From elements insensate. And those signs,<br/>
So clear to all and witnessed out of hand,<br/>
Do not refute this dictum nor oppose;<br/>
But rather themselves do lead us by the hand,<br/>
Compelling belief that living things are born<br/>
Of elements insensate, as I say.<br/>
Sooth, we may see from out the stinking dung<br/>
Live worms spring up, when, after soaking rains,<br/>
The drenched earth rots; and all things change the same:<br/>
Lo, change the rivers, the fronds, the gladsome pastures<br/>
Into the cattle, the cattle their nature change<br/>
Into our bodies, and from our body, oft<br/>
Grow strong the powers and bodies of wild beasts<br/>
And mighty-winged birds. Thus nature changes<br/>
All foods to living frames, and procreates<br/>
From them the senses of live creatures all,<br/>
In manner about as she uncoils in flames<br/>
Dry logs of wood and turns them all to fire.<br/>
And seest not, therefore, how it matters much<br/>
After what order are set the primal germs,<br/>
And with what other germs they all are mixed,<br/>
And what the motions that they give and get?<br/>
<br/>
But now, what is't that strikes thy sceptic mind,<br/>
Constraining thee to sundry arguments<br/>
Against belief that from insensate germs<br/>
The sensible is gendered?—Verily,<br/>
'Tis this: that liquids, earth, and wood, though mixed,<br/>
Are yet unable to gender vital sense.<br/>
And, therefore, 'twill be well in these affairs<br/>
This to remember: that I have not said<br/>
Senses are born, under conditions all,<br/>
From all things absolutely which create<br/>
Objects that feel; but much it matters here<br/>
Firstly, how small the seeds which thus compose<br/>
The feeling thing, then, with what shapes endowed,<br/>
And lastly what they in positions be,<br/>
In motions, in arrangements. Of which facts<br/>
Naught we perceive in logs of wood and clods;<br/>
And yet even these, when sodden by the rains,<br/>
Give birth to wormy grubs, because the bodies<br/>
Of matter, from their old arrangements stirred<br/>
By the new factor, then combine anew<br/>
In such a way as genders living things.<br/>
<br/>
Next, they who deem that feeling objects can<br/>
From feeling objects be create, and these,<br/>
In turn, from others that are wont to feel<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>When soft they make them; for all sense is linked<br/>
With flesh, and thews, and veins—and such, we see,<br/>
Are fashioned soft and of a mortal frame.<br/>
Yet be't that these can last forever on:<br/>
They'll have the sense that's proper to a part,<br/>
Or else be judged to have a sense the same<br/>
As that within live creatures as a whole.<br/>
But of themselves those parts can never feel,<br/>
For all the sense in every member back<br/>
To something else refers—a severed hand,<br/>
Or any other member of our frame,<br/>
Itself alone cannot support sensation.<br/>
It thus remains they must resemble, then,<br/>
Live creatures as a whole, to have the power<br/>
Of feeling sensation concordant in each part<br/>
With the vital sense; and so they're bound to feel<br/>
The things we feel exactly as do we.<br/>
If such the case, how, then, can they be named<br/>
The primal germs of things, and how avoid<br/>
The highways of destruction?—since they be<br/>
Mere living things and living things be all<br/>
One and the same with mortal. Grant they could,<br/>
Yet by their meetings and their unions all,<br/>
Naught would result, indeed, besides a throng<br/>
And hurly-burly all of living things—<br/>
Precisely as men, and cattle, and wild beasts,<br/>
By mere conglomeration each with each<br/>
Can still beget not anything of new.<br/>
But if by chance they lose, inside a body,<br/>
Their own sense and another sense take on,<br/>
What, then, avails it to assign them that<br/>
Which is withdrawn thereafter? And besides,<br/>
To touch on proof that we pronounced before,<br/>
Just as we see the eggs of feathered fowls<br/>
To change to living chicks, and swarming worms<br/>
To bubble forth when from the soaking rains<br/>
The earth is sodden, sure, sensations all<br/>
Can out of non-sensations be begot.<br/>
<br/>
But if one say that sense can so far rise<br/>
From non-sense by mutation, or because<br/>
Brought forth as by a certain sort of birth,<br/>
'Twill serve to render plain to him and prove<br/>
There is no birth, unless there be before<br/>
Some formed union of the elements,<br/>
Nor any change, unless they be unite.<br/>
<br/>
In first place, senses can't in body be<br/>
Before its living nature's been begot,—<br/>
Since all its stuff, in faith, is held dispersed<br/>
About through rivers, air, and earth, and all<br/>
That is from earth created, nor has met<br/>
In combination, and, in proper mode,<br/>
Conjoined into those vital motions which<br/>
Kindle the all-perceiving senses—they<br/>
That keep and guard each living thing soever.<br/>
<br/>
Again, a blow beyond its nature's strength<br/>
Shatters forthwith each living thing soe'er,<br/>
And on it goes confounding all the sense<br/>
Of body and mind. For of the primal germs<br/>
Are loosed their old arrangements, and, throughout,<br/>
The vital motions blocked,—until the stuff,<br/>
Shaken profoundly through the frame entire,<br/>
Undoes the vital knots of soul from body<br/>
And throws that soul, to outward wide-dispersed,<br/>
Through all the pores. For what may we surmise<br/>
A blow inflicted can achieve besides<br/>
Shaking asunder and loosening all apart?<br/>
It happens also, when less sharp the blow,<br/>
The vital motions which are left are wont<br/>
Oft to win out—win out, and stop and still<br/>
The uncouth tumults gendered by the blow,<br/>
And call each part to its own courses back,<br/>
And shake away the motion of death which now<br/>
Begins its own dominion in the body,<br/>
And kindle anew the senses almost gone.<br/>
For by what other means could they the more<br/>
Collect their powers of thought and turn again<br/>
From very doorways of destruction<br/>
Back unto life, rather than pass whereto<br/>
They be already well-nigh sped and so<br/>
Pass quite away?<br/>
<br/>
Again, since pain is there<br/>
Where bodies of matter, by some force stirred up,<br/>
Through vitals and through joints, within their seats<br/>
Quiver and quake inside, but soft delight,<br/>
When they remove unto their place again:<br/>
'Tis thine to know the primal germs can be<br/>
Assaulted by no pain, nor from themselves<br/>
Take no delight; because indeed they are<br/>
Not made of any bodies of first things,<br/>
Under whose strange new motions they might ache<br/>
Or pluck the fruit of any dear new sweet.<br/>
And so they must be furnished with no sense.<br/>
<br/>
Once more, if thus, that every living thing<br/>
May have sensation, needful 'tis to assign<br/>
Sense also to its elements, what then<br/>
Of those fixed elements from which mankind<br/>
Hath been, by their peculiar virtue, formed?<br/>
Of verity, they'll laugh aloud, like men,<br/>
Shaken asunder by a spasm of mirth,<br/>
Or sprinkle with dewy tear-drops cheeks and chins,<br/>
And have the cunning hardihood to say<br/>
Much on the composition of the world,<br/>
And in their turn inquire what elements<br/>
They have themselves,—since, thus the same in kind<br/>
As a whole mortal creature, even they<br/>
Must also be from other elements,<br/>
And then those others from others evermore—<br/>
So that thou darest nowhere make a stop.<br/>
Oho, I'll follow thee until thou grant<br/>
The seed (which here thou say'st speaks, laughs, and<br/>
<br/></p>
<p>thinks)<br/>
Is yet derived out of other seeds<br/>
Which in their turn are doing just the same.<br/>
But if we see what raving nonsense this,<br/>
And that a man may laugh, though not, forsooth,<br/>
Compounded out of laughing elements,<br/>
And think and utter reason with learn'd speech,<br/>
Though not himself compounded, for a fact,<br/>
Of sapient seeds and eloquent, why, then,<br/>
Cannot those things which we perceive to have<br/>
Their own sensation be composed as well<br/>
Of intermixed seeds quite void of sense?<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> INFINITE WORLDS </h2>
<p>Once more, we all from seed celestial spring,<br/>
To all is that same father, from whom earth,<br/>
The fostering mother, as she takes the drops<br/>
Of liquid moisture, pregnant bears her broods—<br/>
The shining grains, and gladsome shrubs and trees,<br/>
And bears the human race and of the wild<br/>
The generations all, the while she yields<br/>
The foods wherewith all feed their frames and lead<br/>
The genial life and propagate their kind;<br/>
Wherefore she owneth that maternal name,<br/>
By old desert. What was before from earth,<br/>
The same in earth sinks back, and what was sent<br/>
From shores of ether, that, returning home,<br/>
The vaults of sky receive. Nor thus doth death<br/>
So far annihilate things that she destroys<br/>
The bodies of matter; but she dissipates<br/>
Their combinations, and conjoins anew<br/>
One element with others; and contrives<br/>
That all things vary forms and change their colours<br/>
And get sensations and straight give them o'er.<br/>
And thus may'st know it matters with what others<br/>
And in what structure the primordial germs<br/>
Are held together, and what motions they<br/>
Among themselves do give and get; nor think<br/>
That aught we see hither and thither afloat<br/>
Upon the crest of things, and now a birth<br/>
And straightway now a ruin, inheres at rest<br/>
Deep in the eternal atoms of the world.<br/>
<br/>
Why, even in these our very verses here<br/>
It matters much with what and in what order<br/>
Each element is set: the same denote<br/>
Sky, and the ocean, lands, and streams, and sun;<br/>
The same, the grains, and trees, and living things.<br/>
And if not all alike, at least the most—<br/>
But what distinctions by positions wrought!<br/>
And thus no less in things themselves, when once<br/>
Around are changed the intervals between,<br/>
The paths of matter, its connections, weights,<br/>
Blows, clashings, motions, order, structure, shapes,<br/>
The things themselves must likewise changed be.<br/>
<br/>
Now to true reason give thy mind for us.<br/>
Since here strange truth is putting forth its might<br/>
To hit thee in thine ears, a new aspect<br/>
Of things to show its front. Yet naught there is<br/>
So easy that it standeth not at first<br/>
More hard to credit than it after is;<br/>
And naught soe'er that's great to such degree,<br/>
Nor wonderful so far, but all mankind<br/>
Little by little abandon their surprise.<br/>
Look upward yonder at the bright clear sky<br/>
And what it holds—the stars that wander o'er,<br/>
The moon, the radiance of the splendour-sun:<br/>
Yet all, if now they first for mortals were,<br/>
If unforeseen now first asudden shown,<br/>
What might there be more wonderful to tell,<br/>
What that the nations would before have dared<br/>
Less to believe might be?—I fancy, naught—<br/>
So strange had been the marvel of that sight.<br/>
The which o'erwearied to behold, to-day<br/>
None deigns look upward to those lucent realms.<br/>
Then, spew not reason from thy mind away,<br/>
Beside thyself because the matter's new,<br/>
But rather with keen judgment nicely weigh;<br/>
And if to thee it then appeareth true,<br/>
Render thy hands, or, if 'tis false at last,<br/>
Gird thee to combat. For my mind-of-man<br/>
Now seeks the nature of the vast Beyond<br/>
There on the other side, that boundless sum<br/>
Which lies without the ramparts of the world,<br/>
Toward which the spirit longs to peer afar,<br/>
Toward which indeed the swift elan of thought<br/>
Flies unencumbered forth.<br/>
<br/>
Firstly, we find,<br/>
Off to all regions round, on either side,<br/>
Above, beneath, throughout the universe<br/>
End is there none—as I have taught, as too<br/>
The very thing of itself declares aloud,<br/>
And as from nature of the unbottomed deep<br/>
Shines clearly forth. Nor can we once suppose<br/>
In any way 'tis likely, (seeing that space<br/>
To all sides stretches infinite and free,<br/>
And seeds, innumerable in number, in sum<br/>
Bottomless, there in many a manner fly,<br/>
Bestirred in everlasting motion there),<br/>
That only this one earth and sky of ours<br/>
Hath been create and that those bodies of stuff,<br/>
So many, perform no work outside the same;<br/>
Seeing, moreover, this world too hath been<br/>
By nature fashioned, even as seeds of things<br/>
By innate motion chanced to clash and cling—<br/>
After they'd been in many a manner driven<br/>
Together at random, without design, in vain—<br/>
And as at last those seeds together dwelt,<br/>
Which, when together of a sudden thrown,<br/>
Should alway furnish the commencements fit<br/>
Of mighty things—the earth, the sea, the sky,<br/>
And race of living creatures. Thus, I say,<br/>
Again, again, 'tmust be confessed there are<br/>
Such congregations of matter otherwhere,<br/>
Like this our world which vasty ether holds<br/>
In huge embrace.<br/>
<br/>
Besides, when matter abundant<br/>
Is ready there, when space on hand, nor object<br/>
Nor any cause retards, no marvel 'tis<br/>
That things are carried on and made complete,<br/>
Perforce. And now, if store of seeds there is<br/>
So great that not whole life-times of the living<br/>
Can count the tale...<br/>
And if their force and nature abide the same,<br/>
Able to throw the seeds of things together<br/>
Into their places, even as here are thrown<br/>
The seeds together in this world of ours,<br/>
'Tmust be confessed in other realms there are<br/>
Still other worlds, still other breeds of men,<br/>
And other generations of the wild.<br/>
<br/>
Hence too it happens in the sum there is<br/>
No one thing single of its kind in birth,<br/>
And single and sole in growth, but rather it is<br/>
One member of some generated race,<br/>
Among full many others of like kind.<br/>
First, cast thy mind abroad upon the living:<br/>
Thou'lt find the race of mountain-ranging wild<br/>
Even thus to be, and thus the scions of men<br/>
To be begot, and lastly the mute flocks<br/>
Of scaled fish, and winged frames of birds.<br/>
Wherefore confess we must on grounds the same<br/>
That earth, sun, moon, and ocean, and all else,<br/>
Exist not sole and single—rather in number<br/>
Exceeding number. Since that deeply set<br/>
Old boundary stone of life remains for them<br/>
No less, and theirs a body of mortal birth<br/>
No less, than every kind which here on earth<br/>
Is so abundant in its members found.<br/>
<br/>
Which well perceived if thou hold in mind,<br/>
Then Nature, delivered from every haughty lord,<br/>
And forthwith free, is seen to do all things<br/>
Herself and through herself of own accord,<br/>
Rid of all gods. For—by their holy hearts<br/>
Which pass in long tranquillity of peace<br/>
Untroubled ages and a serene life!—<br/>
Who hath the power (I ask), who hath the power<br/>
To rule the sum of the immeasurable,<br/>
To hold with steady hand the giant reins<br/>
Of the unfathomed deep? Who hath the power<br/>
At once to roll a multitude of skies,<br/>
At once to heat with fires ethereal all<br/>
The fruitful lands of multitudes of worlds,<br/>
To be at all times in all places near,<br/>
To stablish darkness by his clouds, to shake<br/>
The serene spaces of the sky with sound,<br/>
And hurl his lightnings,—ha, and whelm how oft<br/>
In ruins his own temples, and to rave,<br/>
Retiring to the wildernesses, there<br/>
At practice with that thunderbolt of his,<br/>
Which yet how often shoots the guilty by,<br/>
And slays the honourable blameless ones!<br/>
<br/>
Ere since the birth-time of the world, ere since<br/>
The risen first-born day of sea, earth, sun,<br/>
Have many germs been added from outside,<br/>
Have many seeds been added round about,<br/>
Which the great All, the while it flung them on,<br/>
Brought hither, that from them the sea and lands<br/>
Could grow more big, and that the house of heaven<br/>
Might get more room and raise its lofty roofs<br/>
Far over earth, and air arise around.<br/>
For bodies all, from out all regions, are<br/>
Divided by blows, each to its proper thing,<br/>
And all retire to their own proper kinds:<br/>
The moist to moist retires; earth gets increase<br/>
From earthy body; and fires, as on a forge,<br/>
Beat out new fire; and ether forges ether;<br/>
Till nature, author and ender of the world,<br/>
Hath led all things to extreme bound of growth:<br/>
As haps when that which hath been poured inside<br/>
The vital veins of life is now no more<br/>
Than that which ebbs within them and runs off.<br/>
This is the point where life for each thing ends;<br/>
This is the point where nature with her powers<br/>
Curbs all increase. For whatsoe'er thou seest<br/>
Grow big with glad increase, and step by step<br/>
Climb upward to ripe age, these to themselves<br/>
Take in more bodies than they send from selves,<br/>
Whilst still the food is easily infused<br/>
Through all the veins, and whilst the things are not<br/>
So far expanded that they cast away<br/>
Such numerous atoms as to cause a waste<br/>
Greater than nutriment whereby they wax.<br/>
For 'tmust be granted, truly, that from things<br/>
Many a body ebbeth and runs off;<br/>
But yet still more must come, until the things<br/>
Have touched development's top pinnacle;<br/>
Then old age breaks their powers and ripe strength<br/>
And falls away into a worser part.<br/>
For ever the ampler and more wide a thing,<br/>
As soon as ever its augmentation ends,<br/>
It scatters abroad forthwith to all sides round<br/>
More bodies, sending them from out itself.<br/>
Nor easily now is food disseminate<br/>
Through all its veins; nor is that food enough<br/>
To equal with a new supply on hand<br/>
Those plenteous exhalations it gives off.<br/>
Thus, fairly, all things perish, when with ebbing<br/>
They're made less dense and when from blows without<br/>
They are laid low; since food at last will fail<br/>
Extremest eld, and bodies from outside<br/>
Cease not with thumping to undo a thing<br/>
And overmaster by infesting blows.<br/>
<br/>
Thus, too, the ramparts of the mighty world<br/>
On all sides round shall taken be by storm,<br/>
And tumble to wrack and shivered fragments down.<br/>
For food it is must keep things whole, renewing;<br/>
'Tis food must prop and give support to all,—<br/>
But to no purpose, since nor veins suffice<br/>
To hold enough, nor nature ministers<br/>
As much as needful. And even now 'tis thus:<br/>
Its age is broken and the earth, outworn<br/>
With many parturitions, scarce creates<br/>
The little lives—she who created erst<br/>
All generations and gave forth at birth<br/>
Enormous bodies of wild beasts of old.<br/>
For never, I fancy, did a golden cord<br/>
From off the firmament above let down<br/>
The mortal generations to the fields;<br/>
Nor sea, nor breakers pounding on the rocks<br/>
Created them; but earth it was who bore—<br/>
The same to-day who feeds them from herself.<br/>
Besides, herself of own accord, she first<br/>
The shining grains and vineyards of all joy<br/>
Created for mortality; herself<br/>
Gave the sweet fruitage and the pastures glad,<br/>
Which now to-day yet scarcely wax in size,<br/>
Even when aided by our toiling arms.<br/>
We break the ox, and wear away the strength<br/>
Of sturdy farm-hands; iron tools to-day<br/>
Barely avail for tilling of the fields,<br/>
So niggardly they grudge our harvestings,<br/>
So much increase our labour. Now to-day<br/>
The aged ploughman, shaking of his head,<br/>
Sighs o'er and o'er that labours of his hands<br/>
Have fallen out in vain, and, as he thinks<br/>
How present times are not as times of old,<br/>
Often he praises the fortunes of his sire,<br/>
And crackles, prating, how the ancient race,<br/>
Fulfilled with piety, supported life<br/>
With simple comfort in a narrow plot,<br/>
Since, man for man, the measure of each field<br/>
Was smaller far i' the old days. And, again,<br/>
The gloomy planter of the withered vine<br/>
Rails at the season's change and wearies heaven,<br/>
Nor grasps that all of things by sure degrees<br/>
Are wasting away and going to the tomb,<br/>
Outworn by venerable length of life.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> BOOK III </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> PROEM </h2>
<p>O thou who first uplifted in such dark<br/>
So clear a torch aloft, who first shed light<br/>
Upon the profitable ends of man,<br/>
O thee I follow, glory of the Greeks,<br/>
And set my footsteps squarely planted now<br/>
Even in the impress and the marks of thine—<br/>
Less like one eager to dispute the palm,<br/>
More as one craving out of very love<br/>
That I may copy thee!—for how should swallow<br/>
Contend with swans or what compare could be<br/>
In a race between young kids with tumbling legs<br/>
And the strong might of the horse? Our father thou,<br/>
And finder-out of truth, and thou to us<br/>
Suppliest a father's precepts; and from out<br/>
Those scriven leaves of thine, renowned soul<br/>
(Like bees that sip of all in flowery wolds),<br/>
We feed upon thy golden sayings all—<br/>
Golden, and ever worthiest endless life.<br/>
For soon as ever thy planning thought that sprang<br/>
From god-like mind begins its loud proclaim<br/>
Of nature's courses, terrors of the brain<br/>
Asunder flee, the ramparts of the world<br/>
Dispart away, and through the void entire<br/>
I see the movements of the universe.<br/>
Rises to vision the majesty of gods,<br/>
And their abodes of everlasting calm<br/>
Which neither wind may shake nor rain-cloud splash,<br/>
Nor snow, congealed by sharp frosts, may harm<br/>
With its white downfall: ever, unclouded sky<br/>
O'er roofs, and laughs with far-diffused light.<br/>
And nature gives to them their all, nor aught<br/>
May ever pluck their peace of mind away.<br/>
But nowhere to my vision rise no more<br/>
The vaults of Acheron, though the broad earth<br/>
Bars me no more from gazing down o'er all<br/>
Which under our feet is going on below<br/>
Along the void. O, here in these affairs<br/>
Some new divine delight and trembling awe<br/>
Takes hold through me, that thus by power of thine<br/>
Nature, so plain and manifest at last,<br/>
Hath been on every side laid bare to man!<br/>
<br/>
And since I've taught already of what sort<br/>
The seeds of all things are, and how, distinct<br/>
In divers forms, they flit of own accord,<br/>
Stirred with a motion everlasting on,<br/>
And in what mode things be from them create,<br/>
Now, after such matters, should my verse, meseems,<br/>
Make clear the nature of the mind and soul,<br/>
And drive that dread of Acheron without,<br/>
Headlong, which so confounds our human life<br/>
Unto its deeps, pouring o'er all that is<br/>
The black of death, nor leaves not anything<br/>
To prosper—a liquid and unsullied joy.<br/>
For as to what men sometimes will affirm:<br/>
That more than Tartarus (the realm of death)<br/>
They fear diseases and a life of shame,<br/>
And know the substance of the soul is blood,<br/>
Or rather wind (if haply thus their whim),<br/>
And so need naught of this our science, then<br/>
Thou well may'st note from what's to follow now<br/>
That more for glory do they braggart forth<br/>
Than for belief. For mark these very same:<br/>
Exiles from country, fugitives afar<br/>
From sight of men, with charges foul attaint,<br/>
Abased with every wretchedness, they yet<br/>
Live, and where'er the wretches come, they yet<br/>
Make the ancestral sacrifices there,<br/>
Butcher the black sheep, and to gods below<br/>
Offer the honours, and in bitter case<br/>
Turn much more keenly to religion.<br/>
Wherefore, it's surer testing of a man<br/>
In doubtful perils—mark him as he is<br/>
Amid adversities; for then alone<br/>
Are the true voices conjured from his breast,<br/>
The mask off-stripped, reality behind.<br/>
And greed, again, and the blind lust of honours<br/>
Which force poor wretches past the bounds of law,<br/>
And, oft allies and ministers of crime,<br/>
To push through nights and days with hugest toil<br/>
To rise untrammelled to the peaks of power—<br/>
These wounds of life in no mean part are kept<br/>
Festering and open by this fright of death.<br/>
For ever we see fierce Want and foul Disgrace<br/>
Dislodged afar from secure life and sweet,<br/>
Like huddling Shapes before the doors of death.<br/>
And whilst, from these, men wish to scape afar,<br/>
Driven by false terror, and afar remove,<br/>
With civic blood a fortune they amass,<br/>
They double their riches, greedy, heapers-up<br/>
Of corpse on corpse they have a cruel laugh<br/>
For the sad burial of a brother-born,<br/>
And hatred and fear of tables of their kin.<br/>
Likewise, through this same terror, envy oft<br/>
Makes them to peak because before their eyes<br/>
That man is lordly, that man gazed upon<br/>
Who walks begirt with honour glorious,<br/>
Whilst they in filth and darkness roll around;<br/>
Some perish away for statues and a name,<br/>
And oft to that degree, from fright of death,<br/>
Will hate of living and beholding light<br/>
Take hold on humankind that they inflict<br/>
Their own destruction with a gloomy heart—<br/>
Forgetful that this fear is font of cares,<br/>
This fear the plague upon their sense of shame,<br/>
And this that breaks the ties of comradry<br/>
And oversets all reverence and faith,<br/>
Mid direst slaughter. For long ere to-day<br/>
Often were traitors to country and dear parents<br/>
Through quest to shun the realms of Acheron.<br/>
For just as children tremble and fear all<br/>
In the viewless dark, so even we at times<br/>
Dread in the light so many things that be<br/>
No whit more fearsome than what children feign,<br/>
Shuddering, will be upon them in the dark.<br/>
This terror, then, this darkness of the mind,<br/>
Not sunrise with its flaring spokes of light,<br/>
Nor glittering arrows of morning sun disperse,<br/>
But only nature's aspect and her law.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> NATURE AND COMPOSITION OF THE MIND </h2>
<p>First, then, I say, the mind which oft we call<br/>
The intellect, wherein is seated life's<br/>
Counsel and regimen, is part no less<br/>
Of man than hand and foot and eyes are parts<br/>
Of one whole breathing creature. [But some hold]<br/>
That sense of mind is in no fixed part seated,<br/>
But is of body some one vital state,—<br/>
Named "harmony" by Greeks, because thereby<br/>
We live with sense, though intellect be not<br/>
In any part: as oft the body is said<br/>
To have good health (when health, however, 's not<br/>
One part of him who has it), so they place<br/>
The sense of mind in no fixed part of man.<br/>
Mightily, diversly, meseems they err.<br/>
Often the body palpable and seen<br/>
Sickens, while yet in some invisible part<br/>
We feel a pleasure; oft the other way,<br/>
A miserable in mind feels pleasure still<br/>
Throughout his body—quite the same as when<br/>
A foot may pain without a pain in head.<br/>
Besides, when these our limbs are given o'er<br/>
To gentle sleep and lies the burdened frame<br/>
At random void of sense, a something else<br/>
Is yet within us, which upon that time<br/>
Bestirs itself in many a wise, receiving<br/>
All motions of joy and phantom cares of heart.<br/>
Now, for to see that in man's members dwells<br/>
Also the soul, and body ne'er is wont<br/>
To feel sensation by a "harmony"<br/>
Take this in chief: the fact that life remains<br/>
Oft in our limbs, when much of body's gone;<br/>
Yet that same life, when particles of heat,<br/>
Though few, have scattered been, and through the mouth<br/>
Air has been given forth abroad, forthwith<br/>
Forever deserts the veins, and leaves the bones.<br/>
Thus mayst thou know that not all particles<br/>
Perform like parts, nor in like manner all<br/>
Are props of weal and safety: rather those—<br/>
The seeds of wind and exhalations warm—<br/>
Take care that in our members life remains.<br/>
Therefore a vital heat and wind there is<br/>
Within the very body, which at death<br/>
Deserts our frames. And so, since nature of mind<br/>
And even of soul is found to be, as 'twere,<br/>
A part of man, give over "harmony"—<br/>
Name to musicians brought from Helicon,—<br/>
Unless themselves they filched it otherwise,<br/>
To serve for what was lacking name till then.<br/>
Whate'er it be, they're welcome to it—thou,<br/>
Hearken my other maxims.<br/>
<br/>
Mind and soul,<br/>
I say, are held conjoined one with other,<br/>
And form one single nature of themselves;<br/>
But chief and regnant through the frame entire<br/>
Is still that counsel which we call the mind,<br/>
And that cleaves seated in the midmost breast.<br/>
Here leap dismay and terror; round these haunts<br/>
Be blandishments of joys; and therefore here<br/>
The intellect, the mind. The rest of soul,<br/>
Throughout the body scattered, but obeys—<br/>
Moved by the nod and motion of the mind.<br/>
This, for itself, sole through itself, hath thought;<br/>
This for itself hath mirth, even when the thing<br/>
That moves it, moves nor soul nor body at all.<br/>
And as, when head or eye in us is smit<br/>
By assailing pain, we are not tortured then<br/>
Through all the body, so the mind alone<br/>
Is sometimes smitten, or livens with a joy,<br/>
Whilst yet the soul's remainder through the limbs<br/>
And through the frame is stirred by nothing new.<br/>
But when the mind is moved by shock more fierce,<br/>
We mark the whole soul suffering all at once<br/>
Along man's members: sweats and pallors spread<br/>
Over the body, and the tongue is broken,<br/>
And fails the voice away, and ring the ears,<br/>
Mists blind the eyeballs, and the joints collapse,—<br/>
Aye, men drop dead from terror of the mind.<br/>
Hence, whoso will can readily remark<br/>
That soul conjoined is with mind, and, when<br/>
'Tis strook by influence of the mind, forthwith<br/>
In turn it hits and drives the body too.<br/>
<br/>
And this same argument establisheth<br/>
That nature of mind and soul corporeal is:<br/>
For when 'tis seen to drive the members on,<br/>
To snatch from sleep the body, and to change<br/>
The countenance, and the whole state of man<br/>
To rule and turn,—what yet could never be<br/>
Sans contact, and sans body contact fails—<br/>
Must we not grant that mind and soul consist<br/>
Of a corporeal nature?—And besides<br/>
Thou markst that likewise with this body of ours<br/>
Suffers the mind and with our body feels.<br/>
If the dire speed of spear that cleaves the bones<br/>
And bares the inner thews hits not the life,<br/>
Yet follows a fainting and a foul collapse,<br/>
And, on the ground, dazed tumult in the mind,<br/>
And whiles a wavering will to rise afoot.<br/>
So nature of mind must be corporeal, since<br/>
From stroke and spear corporeal 'tis in throes.<br/>
<br/>
Now, of what body, what components formed<br/>
Is this same mind I will go on to tell.<br/>
First, I aver, 'tis superfine, composed<br/>
Of tiniest particles—that such the fact<br/>
Thou canst perceive, if thou attend, from this:<br/>
Nothing is seen to happen with such speed<br/>
As what the mind proposes and begins;<br/>
Therefore the same bestirs itself more swiftly<br/>
Than aught whose nature's palpable to eyes.<br/>
But what's so agile must of seeds consist<br/>
Most round, most tiny, that they may be moved,<br/>
When hit by impulse slight. So water moves,<br/>
In waves along, at impulse just the least—<br/>
Being create of little shapes that roll;<br/>
But, contrariwise, the quality of honey<br/>
More stable is, its liquids more inert,<br/>
More tardy its flow; for all its stock of matter<br/>
Cleaves more together, since, indeed, 'tis made<br/>
Of atoms not so smooth, so fine, and round.<br/>
For the light breeze that hovers yet can blow<br/>
High heaps of poppy-seed away for thee<br/>
Downward from off the top; but, contrariwise,<br/>
A pile of stones or spiny ears of wheat<br/>
It can't at all. Thus, in so far as bodies<br/>
Are small and smooth, is their mobility;<br/>
But, contrariwise, the heavier and more rough,<br/>
The more immovable they prove. Now, then,<br/>
Since nature of mind is movable so much,<br/>
Consist it must of seeds exceeding small<br/>
And smooth and round. Which fact once known to thee,<br/>
Good friend, will serve thee opportune in else.<br/>
This also shows the nature of the same,<br/>
How nice its texture, in how small a space<br/>
'Twould go, if once compacted as a pellet:<br/>
When death's unvexed repose gets hold on man<br/>
And mind and soul retire, thou markest there<br/>
From the whole body nothing ta'en in form,<br/>
Nothing in weight. Death grants ye everything,<br/>
But vital sense and exhalation hot.<br/>
Thus soul entire must be of smallmost seeds,<br/>
Twined through the veins, the vitals, and the thews,<br/>
Seeing that, when 'tis from whole body gone,<br/>
The outward figuration of the limbs<br/>
Is unimpaired and weight fails not a whit.<br/>
Just so, when vanished the bouquet of wine,<br/>
Or when an unguent's perfume delicate<br/>
Into the winds away departs, or when<br/>
From any body savour's gone, yet still<br/>
The thing itself seems minished naught to eyes,<br/>
Thereby, nor aught abstracted from its weight—<br/>
No marvel, because seeds many and minute<br/>
Produce the savours and the redolence<br/>
In the whole body of the things. And so,<br/>
Again, again, nature of mind and soul<br/>
'Tis thine to know created is of seeds<br/>
The tiniest ever, since at flying-forth<br/>
It beareth nothing of the weight away.<br/>
<br/>
Yet fancy not its nature simple so.<br/>
For an impalpable aura, mixed with heat,<br/>
Deserts the dying, and heat draws off the air;<br/>
And heat there's none, unless commixed with air:<br/>
For, since the nature of all heat is rare,<br/>
Athrough it many seeds of air must move.<br/>
Thus nature of mind is triple; yet those all<br/>
Suffice not for creating sense—since mind<br/>
Accepteth not that aught of these can cause<br/>
Sense-bearing motions, and much less the thoughts<br/>
A man revolves in mind. So unto these<br/>
Must added be a somewhat, and a fourth;<br/>
That somewhat's altogether void of name;<br/>
Than which existeth naught more mobile, naught<br/>
More an impalpable, of elements<br/>
More small and smooth and round. That first transmits<br/>
Sense-bearing motions through the frame, for that<br/>
Is roused the first, composed of little shapes;<br/>
Thence heat and viewless force of wind take up<br/>
The motions, and thence air, and thence all things<br/>
Are put in motion; the blood is strook, and then<br/>
The vitals all begin to feel, and last<br/>
To bones and marrow the sensation comes—<br/>
Pleasure or torment. Nor will pain for naught<br/>
Enter so far, nor a sharp ill seep through,<br/>
But all things be perturbed to that degree<br/>
That room for life will fail, and parts of soul<br/>
Will scatter through the body's every pore.<br/>
Yet as a rule, almost upon the skin<br/>
These motion aIl are stopped, and this is why<br/>
We have the power to retain our life.<br/>
<br/>
Now in my eagerness to tell thee how<br/>
They are commixed, through what unions fit<br/>
They function so, my country's pauper-speech<br/>
Constrains me sadly. As I can, however,<br/>
I'll touch some points and pass. In such a wise<br/>
Course these primordials 'mongst one another<br/>
With inter-motions that no one can be<br/>
From other sundered, nor its agency<br/>
Perform, if once divided by a space;<br/>
Like many powers in one body they work.<br/>
As in the flesh of any creature still<br/>
Is odour and savour and a certain warmth,<br/>
And yet from all of these one bulk of body<br/>
Is made complete, so, viewless force of wind<br/>
And warmth and air, commingled, do create<br/>
One nature, by that mobile energy<br/>
Assisted which from out itself to them<br/>
Imparts initial motion, whereby first<br/>
Sense-bearing motion along the vitals springs.<br/>
For lurks this essence far and deep and under,<br/>
Nor in our body is aught more shut from view,<br/>
And 'tis the very soul of all the soul.<br/>
And as within our members and whole frame<br/>
The energy of mind and power of soul<br/>
Is mixed and latent, since create it is<br/>
Of bodies small and few, so lurks this fourth,<br/>
This essence void of name, composed of small,<br/>
And seems the very soul of all the soul,<br/>
And holds dominion o'er the body all.<br/>
And by like reason wind and air and heat<br/>
Must function so, commingled through the frame,<br/>
And now the one subside and now another<br/>
In interchange of dominance, that thus<br/>
From all of them one nature be produced,<br/>
Lest heat and wind apart, and air apart,<br/>
Make sense to perish, by disseverment.<br/>
There is indeed in mind that heat it gets<br/>
When seething in rage, and flashes from the eyes<br/>
More swiftly fire; there is, again, that wind,<br/>
Much, and so cold, companion of all dread,<br/>
Which rouses the shudder in the shaken frame;<br/>
There is no less that state of air composed,<br/>
Making the tranquil breast, the serene face.<br/>
But more of hot have they whose restive hearts,<br/>
Whose minds of passion quickly seethe in rage—<br/>
Of which kind chief are fierce abounding lions,<br/>
Who often with roaring burst the breast o'erwrought,<br/>
Unable to hold the surging wrath within;<br/>
But the cold mind of stags has more of wind,<br/>
And speedier through their inwards rouses up<br/>
The icy currents which make their members quake.<br/>
But more the oxen live by tranquil air,<br/>
Nor e'er doth smoky torch of wrath applied,<br/>
O'erspreading with shadows of a darkling murk,<br/>
Rouse them too far; nor will they stiffen stark,<br/>
Pierced through by icy javelins of fear;<br/>
But have their place half-way between the two—<br/>
Stags and fierce lions. Thus the race of men:<br/>
Though training make them equally refined,<br/>
It leaves those pristine vestiges behind<br/>
Of each mind's nature. Nor may we suppose<br/>
Evil can e'er be rooted up so far<br/>
That one man's not more given to fits of wrath,<br/>
Another's not more quickly touched by fear,<br/>
A third not more long-suffering than he should.<br/>
And needs must differ in many things besides<br/>
The varied natures and resulting habits<br/>
Of humankind—of which not now can I<br/>
Expound the hidden causes, nor find names<br/>
Enough for all the divers shapes of those<br/>
Primordials whence this variation springs.<br/>
But this meseems I'm able to declare:<br/>
Those vestiges of natures left behind<br/>
Which reason cannot quite expel from us<br/>
Are still so slight that naught prevents a man<br/>
From living a life even worthy of the gods.<br/>
<br/>
So then this soul is kept by all the body,<br/>
Itself the body's guard, and source of weal:<br/>
For they with common roots cleave each to each,<br/>
Nor can be torn asunder without death.<br/>
Not easy 'tis from lumps of frankincense<br/>
To tear their fragrance forth, without its nature<br/>
Perishing likewise: so, not easy 'tis<br/>
From all the body nature of mind and soul<br/>
To draw away, without the whole dissolved.<br/>
With seeds so intertwined even from birth,<br/>
They're dowered conjointly with a partner-life;<br/>
No energy of body or mind, apart,<br/>
Each of itself without the other's power,<br/>
Can have sensation; but our sense, enkindled<br/>
Along the vitals, to flame is blown by both<br/>
With mutual motions. Besides the body alone<br/>
Is nor begot nor grows, nor after death<br/>
Seen to endure. For not as water at times<br/>
Gives off the alien heat, nor is thereby<br/>
Itself destroyed, but unimpaired remains—<br/>
Not thus, I say, can the deserted frame<br/>
Bear the dissevering of its joined soul,<br/>
But, rent and ruined, moulders all away.<br/>
Thus the joint contact of the body and soul<br/>
Learns from their earliest age the vital motions,<br/>
Even when still buried in the mother's womb;<br/>
So no dissevering can hap to them,<br/>
Without their bane and ill. And thence mayst see<br/>
That, as conjoined is their source of weal,<br/>
Conjoined also must their nature be.<br/>
<br/>
If one, moreover, denies that body feel,<br/>
And holds that soul, through all the body mixed,<br/>
Takes on this motion which we title "sense,"<br/>
He battles in vain indubitable facts:<br/>
For who'll explain what body's feeling is,<br/>
Except by what the public fact itself<br/>
Has given and taught us?"But when soul is parted,<br/>
Body's without all sense." True!—loses what<br/>
Was even in its life-time not its own;<br/>
And much beside it loses, when soul's driven<br/>
Forth from that life-time. Or, to say that eyes<br/>
Themselves can see no thing, but through the same<br/>
The mind looks forth, as out of opened doors,<br/>
Is—a hard saying; since the feel in eyes<br/>
Says the reverse. For this itself draws on<br/>
And forces into the pupils of our eyes<br/>
Our consciousness. And note the case when often<br/>
We lack the power to see refulgent things,<br/>
Because our eyes are hampered by their light—<br/>
With a mere doorway this would happen not;<br/>
For, since it is our very selves that see,<br/>
No open portals undertake the toil.<br/>
Besides, if eyes of ours but act as doors,<br/>
Methinks that, were our sight removed, the mind<br/>
Ought then still better to behold a thing—<br/>
When even the door-posts have been cleared away.<br/>
<br/>
Herein in these affairs nowise take up<br/>
What honoured sage, Democritus, lays down—<br/>
That proposition, that primordials<br/>
Of body and mind, each super-posed on each,<br/>
Vary alternately and interweave<br/>
The fabric of our members. For not only<br/>
Are the soul-elements smaller far than those<br/>
Which this our body and inward parts compose,<br/>
But also are they in their number less,<br/>
And scattered sparsely through our frame. And thus<br/>
This canst thou guarantee: soul's primal germs<br/>
Maintain between them intervals as large<br/>
At least as are the smallest bodies, which,<br/>
When thrown against us, in our body rouse<br/>
Sense-bearing motions. Hence it comes that we<br/>
Sometimes don't feel alighting on our frames<br/>
The clinging dust, or chalk that settles soft;<br/>
Nor mists of night, nor spider's gossamer<br/>
We feel against us, when, upon our road,<br/>
Its net entangles us, nor on our head<br/>
The dropping of its withered garmentings;<br/>
Nor bird-feathers, nor vegetable down,<br/>
Flying about, so light they barely fall;<br/>
Nor feel the steps of every crawling thing,<br/>
Nor each of all those footprints on our skin<br/>
Of midges and the like. To that degree<br/>
Must many primal germs be stirred in us<br/>
Ere once the seeds of soul that through our frame<br/>
Are intermingled 'gin to feel that those<br/>
Primordials of the body have been strook,<br/>
And ere, in pounding with such gaps between,<br/>
They clash, combine and leap apart in turn.<br/>
<br/>
But mind is more the keeper of the gates,<br/>
Hath more dominion over life than soul.<br/>
For without intellect and mind there's not<br/>
One part of soul can rest within our frame<br/>
Least part of time; companioning, it goes<br/>
With mind into the winds away, and leaves<br/>
The icy members in the cold of death.<br/>
But he whose mind and intellect abide<br/>
Himself abides in life. However much<br/>
The trunk be mangled, with the limbs lopped off,<br/>
The soul withdrawn and taken from the limbs,<br/>
Still lives the trunk and draws the vital air.<br/>
Even when deprived of all but all the soul,<br/>
Yet will it linger on and cleave to life,—<br/>
Just as the power of vision still is strong,<br/>
If but the pupil shall abide unharmed,<br/>
Even when the eye around it's sorely rent—<br/>
Provided only thou destroyest not<br/>
Wholly the ball, but, cutting round the pupil,<br/>
Leavest that pupil by itself behind—<br/>
For more would ruin sight. But if that centre,<br/>
That tiny part of eye, be eaten through,<br/>
Forthwith the vision fails and darkness comes,<br/>
Though in all else the unblemished ball be clear.<br/>
'Tis by like compact that the soul and mind<br/>
Are each to other bound forevermore.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE SOUL IS MORTAL </h2>
<p>Now come: that thou mayst able be to know<br/>
That minds and the light souls of all that live<br/>
Have mortal birth and death, I will go on<br/>
Verses to build meet for thy rule of life,<br/>
Sought after long, discovered with sweet toil.<br/>
But under one name I'd have thee yoke them both;<br/>
And when, for instance, I shall speak of soul,<br/>
Teaching the same to be but mortal, think<br/>
Thereby I'm speaking also of the mind—<br/>
Since both are one, a substance inter-joined.<br/>
First, then, since I have taught how soul exists<br/>
A subtle fabric, of particles minute,<br/>
Made up from atoms smaller much than those<br/>
Of water's liquid damp, or fog, or smoke,<br/>
So in mobility it far excels,<br/>
More prone to move, though strook by lighter cause<br/>
Even moved by images of smoke or fog—<br/>
As where we view, when in our sleeps we're lulled,<br/>
The altars exhaling steam and smoke aloft—<br/>
For, beyond doubt, these apparitions come<br/>
To us from outward. Now, then, since thou seest,<br/>
Their liquids depart, their waters flow away,<br/>
When jars are shivered, and since fog and smoke<br/>
Depart into the winds away, believe<br/>
The soul no less is shed abroad and dies<br/>
More quickly far, more quickly is dissolved<br/>
Back to its primal bodies, when withdrawn<br/>
From out man's members it has gone away.<br/>
For, sure, if body (container of the same<br/>
Like as a jar), when shivered from some cause,<br/>
And rarefied by loss of blood from veins,<br/>
Cannot for longer hold the soul, how then<br/>
Thinkst thou it can be held by any air—<br/>
A stuff much rarer than our bodies be?<br/>
<br/>
Besides we feel that mind to being comes<br/>
Along with body, with body grows and ages.<br/>
For just as children totter round about<br/>
With frames infirm and tender, so there follows<br/>
A weakling wisdom in their minds; and then,<br/>
Where years have ripened into robust powers,<br/>
Counsel is also greater, more increased<br/>
The power of mind; thereafter, where already<br/>
The body's shattered by master-powers of eld,<br/>
And fallen the frame with its enfeebled powers,<br/>
Thought hobbles, tongue wanders, and the mind gives way;<br/>
All fails, all's lacking at the selfsame time.<br/>
Therefore it suits that even the soul's dissolved,<br/>
Like smoke, into the lofty winds of air;<br/>
Since we behold the same to being come<br/>
Along with body and grow, and, as I've taught,<br/>
Crumble and crack, therewith outworn by eld.<br/>
<br/>
Then, too, we see, that, just as body takes<br/>
Monstrous diseases and the dreadful pain,<br/>
So mind its bitter cares, the grief, the fear;<br/>
Wherefore it tallies that the mind no less<br/>
Partaker is of death; for pain and disease<br/>
Are both artificers of death,—as well<br/>
We've learned by the passing of many a man ere now.<br/>
Nay, too, in diseases of body, often the mind<br/>
Wanders afield; for 'tis beside itself,<br/>
And crazed it speaks, or many a time it sinks,<br/>
With eyelids closing and a drooping nod,<br/>
In heavy drowse, on to eternal sleep;<br/>
From whence nor hears it any voices more,<br/>
Nor able is to know the faces here<br/>
Of those about him standing with wet cheeks<br/>
Who vainly call him back to light and life.<br/>
Wherefore mind too, confess we must, dissolves,<br/>
Seeing, indeed, contagions of disease<br/>
Enter into the same. Again, O why,<br/>
When the strong wine has entered into man,<br/>
And its diffused fire gone round the veins,<br/>
Why follows then a heaviness of limbs,<br/>
A tangle of the legs as round he reels,<br/>
A stuttering tongue, an intellect besoaked,<br/>
Eyes all aswim, and hiccups, shouts, and brawls,<br/>
And whatso else is of that ilk?—Why this?—<br/>
If not that violent and impetuous wine<br/>
Is wont to confound the soul within the body?<br/>
But whatso can confounded be and balked,<br/>
Gives proof, that if a hardier cause got in,<br/>
'Twould hap that it would perish then, bereaved<br/>
Of any life thereafter. And, moreover,<br/>
Often will some one in a sudden fit,<br/>
As if by stroke of lightning, tumble down<br/>
Before our eyes, and sputter foam, and grunt,<br/>
Blither, and twist about with sinews taut,<br/>
Gasp up in starts, and weary out his limbs<br/>
With tossing round. No marvel, since distract<br/>
Through frame by violence of disease.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Confounds, he foams, as if to vomit soul,<br/>
As on the salt sea boil the billows round<br/>
Under the master might of winds. And now<br/>
A groan's forced out, because his limbs are griped,<br/>
But, in the main, because the seeds of voice<br/>
Are driven forth and carried in a mass<br/>
Outwards by mouth, where they are wont to go,<br/>
And have a builded highway. He becomes<br/>
Mere fool, since energy of mind and soul<br/>
Confounded is, and, as I've shown, to-riven,<br/>
Asunder thrown, and torn to pieces all<br/>
By the same venom. But, again, where cause<br/>
Of that disease has faced about, and back<br/>
Retreats sharp poison of corrupted frame<br/>
Into its shadowy lairs, the man at first<br/>
Arises reeling, and gradually comes back<br/>
To all his senses and recovers soul.<br/>
Thus, since within the body itself of man<br/>
The mind and soul are by such great diseases<br/>
Shaken, so miserably in labour distraught,<br/>
Why, then, believe that in the open air,<br/>
Without a body, they can pass their life,<br/>
Immortal, battling with the master winds?<br/>
And, since we mark the mind itself is cured,<br/>
Like the sick body, and restored can be<br/>
By medicine, this is forewarning too<br/>
That mortal lives the mind. For proper it is<br/>
That whosoe'er begins and undertakes<br/>
To alter the mind, or meditates to change<br/>
Any another nature soever, should add<br/>
New parts, or readjust the order given,<br/>
Or from the sum remove at least a bit.<br/>
But what's immortal willeth for itself<br/>
Its parts be nor increased, nor rearranged,<br/>
Nor any bit soever flow away:<br/>
For change of anything from out its bounds<br/>
Means instant death of that which was before.<br/>
Ergo, the mind, whether in sickness fallen,<br/>
Or by the medicine restored, gives signs,<br/>
As I have taught, of its mortality.<br/>
So surely will a fact of truth make head<br/>
'Gainst errors' theories all, and so shut off<br/>
All refuge from the adversary, and rout<br/>
Error by two-edged confutation.<br/>
<br/>
And since the mind is of a man one part,<br/>
Which in one fixed place remains, like ears,<br/>
And eyes, and every sense which pilots life;<br/>
And just as hand, or eye, or nose, apart,<br/>
Severed from us, can neither feel nor be,<br/>
But in the least of time is left to rot,<br/>
Thus mind alone can never be, without<br/>
The body and the man himself, which seems,<br/>
As 'twere the vessel of the same—or aught<br/>
Whate'er thou'lt feign as yet more closely joined:<br/>
Since body cleaves to mind by surest bonds.<br/>
<br/>
Again, the body's and the mind's live powers<br/>
Only in union prosper and enjoy;<br/>
For neither can nature of mind, alone of self<br/>
Sans body, give the vital motions forth;<br/>
Nor, then, can body, wanting soul, endure<br/>
And use the senses. Verily, as the eye,<br/>
Alone, up-rended from its roots, apart<br/>
From all the body, can peer about at naught,<br/>
So soul and mind it seems are nothing able,<br/>
When by themselves. No marvel, because, commixed<br/>
Through veins and inwards, and through bones and thews,<br/>
Their elements primordial are confined<br/>
By all the body, and own no power free<br/>
To bound around through interspaces big,<br/>
Thus, shut within these confines, they take on<br/>
Motions of sense, which, after death, thrown out<br/>
Beyond the body to the winds of air,<br/>
Take on they cannot—and on this account,<br/>
Because no more in such a way confined.<br/>
For air will be a body, be alive,<br/>
If in that air the soul can keep itself,<br/>
And in that air enclose those motions all<br/>
Which in the thews and in the body itself<br/>
A while ago 'twas making. So for this,<br/>
Again, again, I say confess we must,<br/>
That, when the body's wrappings are unwound,<br/>
And when the vital breath is forced without,<br/>
The soul, the senses of the mind dissolve,—<br/>
Since for the twain the cause and ground of life<br/>
Is in the fact of their conjoined estate.<br/>
<br/>
Once more, since body's unable to sustain<br/>
Division from the soul, without decay<br/>
And obscene stench, how canst thou doubt but that<br/>
The soul, uprisen from the body's deeps,<br/>
Has filtered away, wide-drifted like a smoke,<br/>
Or that the changed body crumbling fell<br/>
With ruin so entire, because, indeed,<br/>
Its deep foundations have been moved from place,<br/>
The soul out-filtering even through the frame,<br/>
And through the body's every winding way<br/>
And orifice? And so by many means<br/>
Thou'rt free to learn that nature of the soul<br/>
Hath passed in fragments out along the frame,<br/>
And that 'twas shivered in the very body<br/>
Ere ever it slipped abroad and swam away<br/>
Into the winds of air. For never a man<br/>
Dying appears to feel the soul go forth<br/>
As one sure whole from all his body at once,<br/>
Nor first come up the throat and into mouth;<br/>
But feels it failing in a certain spot,<br/>
Even as he knows the senses too dissolve<br/>
Each in its own location in the frame.<br/>
But were this mind of ours immortal mind,<br/>
Dying 'twould scarce bewail a dissolution,<br/>
But rather the going, the leaving of its coat,<br/>
Like to a snake. Wherefore, when once the body<br/>
Hath passed away, admit we must that soul,<br/>
Shivered in all that body, perished too.<br/>
Nay, even when moving in the bounds of life,<br/>
Often the soul, now tottering from some cause,<br/>
Craves to go out, and from the frame entire<br/>
Loosened to be; the countenance becomes<br/>
Flaccid, as if the supreme hour were there;<br/>
And flabbily collapse the members all<br/>
Against the bloodless trunk—the kind of case<br/>
We see when we remark in common phrase,<br/>
"That man's quite gone," or "fainted dead away";<br/>
And where there's now a bustle of alarm,<br/>
And all are eager to get some hold upon<br/>
The man's last link of life. For then the mind<br/>
And all the power of soul are shook so sore,<br/>
And these so totter along with all the frame,<br/>
That any cause a little stronger might<br/>
Dissolve them altogether.—Why, then, doubt<br/>
That soul, when once without the body thrust,<br/>
There in the open, an enfeebled thing,<br/>
Its wrappings stripped away, cannot endure<br/>
Not only through no everlasting age,<br/>
But even, indeed, through not the least of time?<br/>
<br/>
Then, too, why never is the intellect,<br/>
The counselling mind, begotten in the head,<br/>
The feet, the hands, instead of cleaving still<br/>
To one sole seat, to one fixed haunt, the breast,<br/>
If not that fixed places be assigned<br/>
For each thing's birth, where each, when 'tis create,<br/>
Is able to endure, and that our frames<br/>
Have such complex adjustments that no shift<br/>
In order of our members may appear?<br/>
To that degree effect succeeds to cause,<br/>
Nor is the flame once wont to be create<br/>
In flowing streams, nor cold begot in fire.<br/>
<br/>
Besides, if nature of soul immortal be,<br/>
And able to feel, when from our frame disjoined,<br/>
The same, I fancy, must be thought to be<br/>
Endowed with senses five,—nor is there way<br/>
But this whereby to image to ourselves<br/>
How under-souls may roam in Acheron.<br/>
Thus painters and the elder race of bards<br/>
Have pictured souls with senses so endowed.<br/>
But neither eyes, nor nose, nor hand, alone<br/>
Apart from body can exist for soul,<br/>
Nor tongue nor ears apart. And hence indeed<br/>
Alone by self they can nor feel nor be.<br/>
<br/>
And since we mark the vital sense to be<br/>
In the whole body, all one living thing,<br/>
If of a sudden a force with rapid stroke<br/>
Should slice it down the middle and cleave in twain,<br/>
Beyond a doubt likewise the soul itself,<br/>
Divided, dissevered, asunder will be flung<br/>
Along with body. But what severed is<br/>
And into sundry parts divides, indeed<br/>
Admits it owns no everlasting nature.<br/>
We hear how chariots of war, areek<br/>
With hurly slaughter, lop with flashing scythes<br/>
The limbs away so suddenly that there,<br/>
Fallen from the trunk, they quiver on the earth,<br/>
The while the mind and powers of the man<br/>
Can feel no pain, for swiftness of his hurt,<br/>
And sheer abandon in the zest of battle:<br/>
With the remainder of his frame he seeks<br/>
Anew the battle and the slaughter, nor marks<br/>
How the swift wheels and scythes of ravin have dragged<br/>
Off with the horses his left arm and shield;<br/>
Nor other how his right has dropped away,<br/>
Mounting again and on. A third attempts<br/>
With leg dismembered to arise and stand,<br/>
Whilst, on the ground hard by, the dying foot<br/>
Twitches its spreading toes. And even the head,<br/>
When from the warm and living trunk lopped off,<br/>
Keeps on the ground the vital countenance<br/>
And open eyes, until 't has rendered up<br/>
All remnants of the soul. Nay, once again:<br/>
If, when a serpent's darting forth its tongue,<br/>
And lashing its tail, thou gettest chance to hew<br/>
With axe its length of trunk to many parts,<br/>
Thou'lt see each severed fragment writhing round<br/>
With its fresh wound, and spattering up the sod,<br/>
And there the fore-part seeking with the jaws<br/>
After the hinder, with bite to stop the pain.<br/>
So shall we say that these be souls entire<br/>
In all those fractions?—but from that 'twould follow<br/>
One creature'd have in body many souls.<br/>
Therefore, the soul, which was indeed but one,<br/>
Has been divided with the body too:<br/>
Each is but mortal, since alike is each<br/>
Hewn into many parts. Again, how often<br/>
We view our fellow going by degrees,<br/>
And losing limb by limb the vital sense;<br/>
First nails and fingers of the feet turn blue,<br/>
Next die the feet and legs, then o'er the rest<br/>
Slow crawl the certain footsteps of cold death.<br/>
And since this nature of the soul is torn,<br/>
Nor mounts away, as at one time, entire,<br/>
We needs must hold it mortal. But perchance<br/>
If thou supposest that the soul itself<br/>
Can inward draw along the frame, and bring<br/>
Its parts together to one place, and so<br/>
From all the members draw the sense away,<br/>
Why, then, that place in which such stock of soul<br/>
Collected is, should greater seem in sense.<br/>
But since such place is nowhere, for a fact,<br/>
As said before, 'tis rent and scattered forth,<br/>
And so goes under. Or again, if now<br/>
I please to grant the false, and say that soul<br/>
Can thus be lumped within the frames of those<br/>
Who leave the sunshine, dying bit by bit,<br/>
Still must the soul as mortal be confessed;<br/>
Nor aught it matters whether to wrack it go,<br/>
Dispersed in the winds, or, gathered in a mass<br/>
From all its parts, sink down to brutish death,<br/>
Since more and more in every region sense<br/>
Fails the whole man, and less and less of life<br/>
In every region lingers.<br/>
<br/>
And besides,<br/>
If soul immortal is, and winds its way<br/>
Into the body at the birth of man,<br/>
Why can we not remember something, then,<br/>
Of life-time spent before? why keep we not<br/>
Some footprints of the things we did of, old?<br/>
But if so changed hath been the power of mind,<br/>
That every recollection of things done<br/>
Is fallen away, at no o'erlong remove<br/>
Is that, I trow, from what we mean by death.<br/>
Wherefore 'tis sure that what hath been before<br/>
Hath died, and what now is is now create.<br/>
<br/>
Moreover, if after the body hath been built<br/>
Our mind's live powers are wont to be put in,<br/>
Just at the moment that we come to birth,<br/>
And cross the sills of life, 'twould scarcely fit<br/>
For them to live as if they seemed to grow<br/>
Along with limbs and frame, even in the blood,<br/>
But rather as in a cavern all alone.<br/>
(Yet all the body duly throngs with sense.)<br/>
But public fact declares against all this:<br/>
For soul is so entwined through the veins,<br/>
The flesh, the thews, the bones, that even the teeth<br/>
Share in sensation, as proven by dull ache,<br/>
By twinge from icy water, or grating crunch<br/>
Upon a stone that got in mouth with bread.<br/>
Wherefore, again, again, souls must be thought<br/>
Nor void of birth, nor free from law of death;<br/>
Nor, if, from outward, in they wound their way,<br/>
Could they be thought as able so to cleave<br/>
To these our frames, nor, since so interwove,<br/>
Appears it that they're able to go forth<br/>
Unhurt and whole and loose themselves unscathed<br/>
From all the thews, articulations, bones.<br/>
But, if perchance thou thinkest that the soul,<br/>
From outward winding in its way, is wont<br/>
To seep and soak along these members ours,<br/>
Then all the more 'twill perish, being thus<br/>
With body fused—for what will seep and soak<br/>
Will be dissolved and will therefore die.<br/>
For just as food, dispersed through all the pores<br/>
Of body, and passed through limbs and all the frame,<br/>
Perishes, supplying from itself the stuff<br/>
For other nature, thus the soul and mind,<br/>
Though whole and new into a body going,<br/>
Are yet, by seeping in, dissolved away,<br/>
Whilst, as through pores, to all the frame there pass<br/>
Those particles from which created is<br/>
This nature of mind, now ruler of our body,<br/>
Born from that soul which perished, when divided<br/>
Along the frame. Wherefore it seems that soul<br/>
Hath both a natal and funeral hour.<br/>
<br/>
Besides are seeds of soul there left behind<br/>
In the breathless body, or not? If there they are,<br/>
It cannot justly be immortal deemed,<br/>
Since, shorn of some parts lost, 'thas gone away:<br/>
But if, borne off with members uncorrupt,<br/>
'Thas fled so absolutely all away<br/>
It leaves not one remainder of itself<br/>
Behind in body, whence do cadavers, then,<br/>
From out their putrid flesh exhale the worms,<br/>
And whence does such a mass of living things,<br/>
Boneless and bloodless, o'er the bloated frame<br/>
Bubble and swarm? But if perchance thou thinkest<br/>
That souls from outward into worms can wind,<br/>
And each into a separate body come,<br/>
And reckonest not why many thousand souls<br/>
Collect where only one has gone away,<br/>
Here is a point, in sooth, that seems to need<br/>
Inquiry and a putting to the test:<br/>
Whether the souls go on a hunt for seeds<br/>
Of worms wherewith to build their dwelling places,<br/>
Or enter bodies ready-made, as 'twere.<br/>
But why themselves they thus should do and toil<br/>
'Tis hard to say, since, being free of body,<br/>
They flit around, harassed by no disease,<br/>
Nor cold nor famine; for the body labours<br/>
By more of kinship to these flaws of life,<br/>
And mind by contact with that body suffers<br/>
So many ills. But grant it be for them<br/>
However useful to construct a body<br/>
To which to enter in, 'tis plain they can't.<br/>
Then, souls for self no frames nor bodies make,<br/>
Nor is there how they once might enter in<br/>
To bodies ready-made—for they cannot<br/>
Be nicely interwoven with the same,<br/>
And there'll be formed no interplay of sense<br/>
Common to each.<br/>
<br/>
Again, why is't there goes<br/>
Impetuous rage with lion's breed morose,<br/>
And cunning with foxes, and to deer why given<br/>
The ancestral fear and tendency to flee,<br/>
And why in short do all the rest of traits<br/>
Engender from the very start of life<br/>
In the members and mentality, if not<br/>
Because one certain power of mind that came<br/>
From its own seed and breed waxes the same<br/>
Along with all the body? But were mind<br/>
Immortal, were it wont to change its bodies,<br/>
How topsy-turvy would earth's creatures act!<br/>
The Hyrcan hound would flee the onset oft<br/>
Of antlered stag, the scurrying hawk would quake<br/>
Along the winds of air at the coming dove,<br/>
And men would dote, and savage beasts be wise;<br/>
For false the reasoning of those that say<br/>
Immortal mind is changed by change of body—<br/>
For what is changed dissolves, and therefore dies.<br/>
For parts are re-disposed and leave their order;<br/>
Wherefore they must be also capable<br/>
Of dissolution through the frame at last,<br/>
That they along with body perish all.<br/>
But should some say that always souls of men<br/>
Go into human bodies, I will ask:<br/>
How can a wise become a dullard soul?<br/>
And why is never a child's a prudent soul?<br/>
And the mare's filly why not trained so well<br/>
As sturdy strength of steed? We may be sure<br/>
They'll take their refuge in the thought that mind<br/>
Becomes a weakling in a weakling frame.<br/>
Yet be this so, 'tis needful to confess<br/>
The soul but mortal, since, so altered now<br/>
Throughout the frame, it loses the life and sense<br/>
It had before. Or how can mind wax strong<br/>
Coequally with body and attain<br/>
The craved flower of life, unless it be<br/>
The body's colleague in its origins?<br/>
Or what's the purport of its going forth<br/>
From aged limbs?—fears it, perhaps, to stay,<br/>
Pent in a crumbled body? Or lest its house,<br/>
Outworn by venerable length of days,<br/>
May topple down upon it? But indeed<br/>
For an immortal perils are there none.<br/>
<br/>
Again, at parturitions of the wild<br/>
And at the rites of Love, that souls should stand<br/>
Ready hard by seems ludicrous enough—<br/>
Immortals waiting for their mortal limbs<br/>
In numbers innumerable, contending madly<br/>
Which shall be first and chief to enter in!—<br/>
Unless perchance among the souls there be<br/>
Such treaties stablished that the first to come<br/>
Flying along, shall enter in the first,<br/>
And that they make no rivalries of strength!<br/>
<br/>
Again, in ether can't exist a tree,<br/>
Nor clouds in ocean deeps, nor in the fields<br/>
Can fishes live, nor blood in timber be,<br/>
Nor sap in boulders: fixed and arranged<br/>
Where everything may grow and have its place.<br/>
Thus nature of mind cannot arise alone<br/>
Without the body, nor exist afar<br/>
From thews and blood. But if 'twere possible,<br/>
Much rather might this very power of mind<br/>
Be in the head, the shoulders or the heels,<br/>
And, born in any part soever, yet<br/>
In the same man, in the same vessel abide.<br/>
But since within this body even of ours<br/>
Stands fixed and appears arranged sure<br/>
Where soul and mind can each exist and grow,<br/>
Deny we must the more that they can have<br/>
Duration and birth, wholly outside the frame.<br/>
For, verily, the mortal to conjoin<br/>
With the eternal, and to feign they feel<br/>
Together, and can function each with each,<br/>
Is but to dote: for what can be conceived<br/>
Of more unlike, discrepant, ill-assorted,<br/>
Than something mortal in a union joined<br/>
With an immortal and a secular<br/>
To bear the outrageous tempests?<br/>
<br/>
Then, again,<br/>
Whatever abides eternal must indeed<br/>
Either repel all strokes, because 'tis made<br/>
Of solid body, and permit no entrance<br/>
Of aught with power to sunder from within<br/>
The parts compact—as are those seeds of stuff<br/>
Whose nature we've exhibited before;<br/>
Or else be able to endure through time<br/>
For this: because they are from blows exempt,<br/>
As is the void, the which abides untouched,<br/>
Unsmit by any stroke; or else because<br/>
There is no room around, whereto things can,<br/>
As 'twere, depart in dissolution all,—<br/>
Even as the sum of sums eternal is,<br/>
Without or place beyond whereto things may<br/>
Asunder fly, or bodies which can smite,<br/>
And thus dissolve them by the blows of might.<br/>
<br/>
But if perchance the soul's to be adjudged<br/>
Immortal, mainly on ground 'tis kept secure<br/>
In vital forces—either because there come<br/>
Never at all things hostile to its weal,<br/>
Or else because what come somehow retire,<br/>
Repelled or ere we feel the harm they work,<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>For, lo, besides that, when the frame's diseased,<br/>
Soul sickens too, there cometh, many a time,<br/>
That which torments it with the things to be,<br/>
Keeps it in dread, and wearies it with cares;<br/>
And even when evil acts are of the past,<br/>
Still gnaw the old transgressions bitterly.<br/>
Add, too, that frenzy, peculiar to the mind,<br/>
And that oblivion of the things that were;<br/>
Add its submergence in the murky waves<br/>
Of drowse and torpor.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> FOLLY OF THE FEAR OF DEATH </h2>
<p>Therefore death to us<br/>
Is nothing, nor concerns us in the least,<br/>
Since nature of mind is mortal evermore.<br/>
And just as in the ages gone before<br/>
We felt no touch of ill, when all sides round<br/>
To battle came the Carthaginian host,<br/>
And the times, shaken by tumultuous war,<br/>
Under the aery coasts of arching heaven<br/>
Shuddered and trembled, and all humankind<br/>
Doubted to which the empery should fall<br/>
By land and sea, thus when we are no more,<br/>
When comes that sundering of our body and soul<br/>
Through which we're fashioned to a single state,<br/>
Verily naught to us, us then no more,<br/>
Can come to pass, naught move our senses then—<br/>
No, not if earth confounded were with sea,<br/>
And sea with heaven. But if indeed do feel<br/>
The nature of mind and energy of soul,<br/>
After their severance from this body of ours,<br/>
Yet nothing 'tis to us who in the bonds<br/>
And wedlock of the soul and body live,<br/>
Through which we're fashioned to a single state.<br/>
And, even if time collected after death<br/>
The matter of our frames and set it all<br/>
Again in place as now, and if again<br/>
To us the light of life were given, O yet<br/>
That process too would not concern us aught,<br/>
When once the self-succession of our sense<br/>
Has been asunder broken. And now and here,<br/>
Little enough we're busied with the selves<br/>
We were aforetime, nor, concerning them,<br/>
Suffer a sore distress. For shouldst thou gaze<br/>
Backwards across all yesterdays of time<br/>
The immeasurable, thinking how manifold<br/>
The motions of matter are, then couldst thou well<br/>
Credit this too: often these very seeds<br/>
(From which we are to-day) of old were set<br/>
In the same order as they are to-day—<br/>
Yet this we can't to consciousness recall<br/>
Through the remembering mind. For there hath been<br/>
An interposed pause of life, and wide<br/>
Have all the motions wandered everywhere<br/>
From these our senses. For if woe and ail<br/>
Perchance are toward, then the man to whom<br/>
The bane can happen must himself be there<br/>
At that same time. But death precludeth this,<br/>
Forbidding life to him on whom might crowd<br/>
Such irk and care; and granted 'tis to know:<br/>
Nothing for us there is to dread in death,<br/>
No wretchedness for him who is no more,<br/>
The same estate as if ne'er born before,<br/>
When death immortal hath ta'en the mortal life.<br/>
<br/>
Hence, where thou seest a man to grieve because<br/>
When dead he rots with body laid away,<br/>
Or perishes in flames or jaws of beasts,<br/>
Know well: he rings not true, and that beneath<br/>
Still works an unseen sting upon his heart,<br/>
However he deny that he believes.<br/>
His shall be aught of feeling after death.<br/>
For he, I fancy, grants not what he says,<br/>
Nor what that presupposes, and he fails<br/>
To pluck himself with all his roots from life<br/>
And cast that self away, quite unawares<br/>
Feigning that some remainder's left behind.<br/>
For when in life one pictures to oneself<br/>
His body dead by beasts and vultures torn,<br/>
He pities his state, dividing not himself<br/>
Therefrom, removing not the self enough<br/>
From the body flung away, imagining<br/>
Himself that body, and projecting there<br/>
His own sense, as he stands beside it: hence<br/>
He grieves that he is mortal born, nor marks<br/>
That in true death there is no second self<br/>
Alive and able to sorrow for self destroyed,<br/>
Or stand lamenting that the self lies there<br/>
Mangled or burning. For if it an evil is<br/>
Dead to be jerked about by jaw and fang<br/>
Of the wild brutes, I see not why 'twere not<br/>
Bitter to lie on fires and roast in flames,<br/>
Or suffocate in honey, and, reclined<br/>
On the smooth oblong of an icy slab,<br/>
Grow stiff in cold, or sink with load of earth<br/>
Down-crushing from above.<br/>
<br/>
"Thee now no more<br/>
The joyful house and best of wives shall welcome,<br/>
Nor little sons run up to snatch their kisses<br/>
And touch with silent happiness thy heart.<br/>
Thou shalt not speed in undertakings more,<br/>
Nor be the warder of thine own no more.<br/>
Poor wretch," they say, "one hostile hour hath ta'en<br/>
Wretchedly from thee all life's many guerdons,"<br/>
But add not, "yet no longer unto thee<br/>
Remains a remnant of desire for them"<br/>
If this they only well perceived with mind<br/>
And followed up with maxims, they would free<br/>
Their state of man from anguish and from fear.<br/>
"O even as here thou art, aslumber in death,<br/>
So shalt thou slumber down the rest of time,<br/>
Released from every harrying pang. But we,<br/>
We have bewept thee with insatiate woe,<br/>
Standing beside whilst on the awful pyre<br/>
Thou wert made ashes; and no day shall take<br/>
For us the eternal sorrow from the breast."<br/>
But ask the mourner what's the bitterness<br/>
That man should waste in an eternal grief,<br/>
If, after all, the thing's but sleep and rest?<br/>
For when the soul and frame together are sunk<br/>
In slumber, no one then demands his self<br/>
Or being. Well, this sleep may be forever,<br/>
Without desire of any selfhood more,<br/>
For all it matters unto us asleep.<br/>
Yet not at all do those primordial germs<br/>
Roam round our members, at that time, afar<br/>
From their own motions that produce our senses—<br/>
Since, when he's startled from his sleep, a man<br/>
Collects his senses. Death is, then, to us<br/>
Much less—if there can be a less than that<br/>
Which is itself a nothing: for there comes<br/>
Hard upon death a scattering more great<br/>
Of the throng of matter, and no man wakes up<br/>
On whom once falls the icy pause of life.<br/>
<br/>
This too, O often from the soul men say,<br/>
Along their couches holding of the cups,<br/>
With faces shaded by fresh wreaths awry:<br/>
"Brief is this fruit of joy to paltry man,<br/>
Soon, soon departed, and thereafter, no,<br/>
It may not be recalled."—As if, forsooth,<br/>
It were their prime of evils in great death<br/>
To parch, poor tongues, with thirst and arid drought,<br/>
Or chafe for any lack.<br/>
<br/>
Once more, if Nature<br/>
Should of a sudden send a voice abroad,<br/>
And her own self inveigh against us so:<br/>
"Mortal, what hast thou of such grave concern<br/>
That thou indulgest in too sickly plaints?<br/>
Why this bemoaning and beweeping death?<br/>
For if thy life aforetime and behind<br/>
To thee was grateful, and not all thy good<br/>
Was heaped as in sieve to flow away<br/>
And perish unavailingly, why not,<br/>
Even like a banqueter, depart the halls,<br/>
Laden with life? why not with mind content<br/>
Take now, thou fool, thy unafflicted rest?<br/>
But if whatever thou enjoyed hath been<br/>
Lavished and lost, and life is now offence,<br/>
Why seekest more to add—which in its turn<br/>
Will perish foully and fall out in vain?<br/>
O why not rather make an end of life,<br/>
Of labour? For all I may devise or find<br/>
To pleasure thee is nothing: all things are<br/>
The same forever. Though not yet thy body<br/>
Wrinkles with years, nor yet the frame exhausts<br/>
Outworn, still things abide the same, even if<br/>
Thou goest on to conquer all of time<br/>
With length of days, yea, if thou never diest"—<br/>
What were our answer, but that Nature here<br/>
Urges just suit and in her words lays down<br/>
True cause of action? Yet should one complain,<br/>
Riper in years and elder, and lament,<br/>
Poor devil, his death more sorely than is fit,<br/>
Then would she not, with greater right, on him<br/>
Cry out, inveighing with a voice more shrill:<br/>
"Off with thy tears, and choke thy whines, buffoon!<br/>
Thou wrinklest—after thou hast had the sum<br/>
Of the guerdons of life; yet, since thou cravest ever<br/>
What's not at hand, contemning present good,<br/>
That life has slipped away, unperfected<br/>
And unavailing unto thee. And now,<br/>
Or ere thou guessed it, death beside thy head<br/>
Stands—and before thou canst be going home<br/>
Sated and laden with the goodly feast.<br/>
But now yield all that's alien to thine age,—<br/>
Up, with good grace! make room for sons: thou must."<br/>
Justly, I fancy, would she reason thus,<br/>
Justly inveigh and gird: since ever the old<br/>
Outcrowded by the new gives way, and ever<br/>
The one thing from the others is repaired.<br/>
Nor no man is consigned to the abyss<br/>
Of Tartarus, the black. For stuff must be,<br/>
That thus the after-generations grow,—<br/>
Though these, their life completed, follow thee;<br/>
And thus like thee are generations all—<br/>
Already fallen, or some time to fall.<br/>
So one thing from another rises ever;<br/>
And in fee-simple life is given to none,<br/>
But unto all mere usufruct.<br/>
<br/>
Look back:<br/>
Nothing to us was all fore-passed eld<br/>
Of time the eternal, ere we had a birth.<br/>
And Nature holds this like a mirror up<br/>
Of time-to-be when we are dead and gone.<br/>
And what is there so horrible appears?<br/>
Now what is there so sad about it all?<br/>
Is't not serener far than any sleep?<br/>
<br/>
And, verily, those tortures said to be<br/>
In Acheron, the deep, they all are ours<br/>
Here in this life. No Tantalus, benumbed<br/>
With baseless terror, as the fables tell,<br/>
Fears the huge boulder hanging in the air:<br/>
But, rather, in life an empty dread of Gods<br/>
Urges mortality, and each one fears<br/>
Such fall of fortune as may chance to him.<br/>
Nor eat the vultures into Tityus<br/>
Prostrate in Acheron, nor can they find,<br/>
Forsooth, throughout eternal ages, aught<br/>
To pry around for in that mighty breast.<br/>
However hugely he extend his bulk—<br/>
Who hath for outspread limbs not acres nine,<br/>
But the whole earth—he shall not able be<br/>
To bear eternal pain nor furnish food<br/>
From his own frame forever. But for us<br/>
A Tityus is he whom vultures rend<br/>
Prostrate in love, whom anxious anguish eats,<br/>
Whom troubles of any unappeased desires<br/>
Asunder rip. We have before our eyes<br/>
Here in this life also a Sisyphus<br/>
In him who seeketh of the populace<br/>
The rods, the axes fell, and evermore<br/>
Retires a beaten and a gloomy man.<br/>
For to seek after power—an empty name,<br/>
Nor given at all—and ever in the search<br/>
To endure a world of toil, O this it is<br/>
To shove with shoulder up the hill a stone<br/>
Which yet comes rolling back from off the top,<br/>
And headlong makes for levels of the plain.<br/>
Then to be always feeding an ingrate mind,<br/>
Filling with good things, satisfying never—<br/>
As do the seasons of the year for us,<br/>
When they return and bring their progenies<br/>
And varied charms, and we are never filled<br/>
With the fruits of life—O this, I fancy, 'tis<br/>
To pour, like those young virgins in the tale,<br/>
Waters into a sieve, unfilled forever.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Cerberus and Furies, and that Lack of Light<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Tartarus, out-belching from his mouth the surge<br/>
Of horrible heat—the which are nowhere, nor<br/>
Indeed can be: but in this life is fear<br/>
Of retributions just and expiations<br/>
For evil acts: the dungeon and the leap<br/>
From that dread rock of infamy, the stripes,<br/>
The executioners, the oaken rack,<br/>
The iron plates, bitumen, and the torch.<br/>
And even though these are absent, yet the mind,<br/>
With a fore-fearing conscience, plies its goads<br/>
And burns beneath the lash, nor sees meanwhile<br/>
What terminus of ills, what end of pine<br/>
Can ever be, and feareth lest the same<br/>
But grow more heavy after death. Of truth,<br/>
The life of fools is Acheron on earth.<br/>
<br/>
This also to thy very self sometimes<br/>
Repeat thou mayst: "Lo, even good Ancus left<br/>
The sunshine with his eyes, in divers things<br/>
A better man than thou, O worthless hind;<br/>
And many other kings and lords of rule<br/>
Thereafter have gone under, once who swayed<br/>
O'er mighty peoples. And he also, he—<br/>
Who whilom paved a highway down the sea,<br/>
And gave his legionaries thoroughfare<br/>
Along the deep, and taught them how to cross<br/>
The pools of brine afoot, and did contemn,<br/>
Trampling upon it with his cavalry,<br/>
The bellowings of ocean—poured his soul<br/>
From dying body, as his light was ta'en.<br/>
And Scipio's son, the thunderbolt of war,<br/>
Horror of Carthage, gave his bones to earth,<br/>
Like to the lowliest villein in the house.<br/>
Add finders-out of sciences and arts;<br/>
Add comrades of the Heliconian dames,<br/>
Among whom Homer, sceptered o'er them all,<br/>
Now lies in slumber sunken with the rest.<br/>
Then, too, Democritus, when ripened eld<br/>
Admonished him his memory waned away,<br/>
Of own accord offered his head to death.<br/>
Even Epicurus went, his light of life<br/>
Run out, the man in genius who o'er-topped<br/>
The human race, extinguishing all others,<br/>
As sun, in ether arisen, all the stars.<br/>
Wilt thou, then, dally, thou complain to go?—<br/>
For whom already life's as good as dead,<br/>
Whilst yet thou livest and lookest?—who in sleep<br/>
Wastest thy life—time's major part, and snorest<br/>
Even when awake, and ceasest not to see<br/>
The stuff of dreams, and bearest a mind beset<br/>
By baseless terror, nor discoverest oft<br/>
What's wrong with thee, when, like a sotted wretch,<br/>
Thou'rt jostled along by many crowding cares,<br/>
And wanderest reeling round, with mind aswim."<br/>
<br/>
If men, in that same way as on the mind<br/>
They feel the load that wearies with its weight,<br/>
Could also know the causes whence it comes,<br/>
And why so great the heap of ill on heart,<br/>
O not in this sort would they live their life,<br/>
As now so much we see them, knowing not<br/>
What 'tis they want, and seeking ever and ever<br/>
A change of place, as if to drop the burden.<br/>
The man who sickens of his home goes out,<br/>
Forth from his splendid halls, and straight—returns,<br/>
Feeling i'faith no better off abroad.<br/>
He races, driving his Gallic ponies along,<br/>
Down to his villa, madly,—as in haste<br/>
To hurry help to a house afire.—At once<br/>
He yawns, as soon as foot has touched the threshold,<br/>
Or drowsily goes off in sleep and seeks<br/>
Forgetfulness, or maybe bustles about<br/>
And makes for town again. In such a way<br/>
Each human flees himself—a self in sooth,<br/>
As happens, he by no means can escape;<br/>
And willy-nilly he cleaves to it and loathes,<br/>
Sick, sick, and guessing not the cause of ail.<br/>
Yet should he see but that, O chiefly then,<br/>
Leaving all else, he'd study to divine<br/>
The nature of things, since here is in debate<br/>
Eternal time and not the single hour,<br/>
Mortal's estate in whatsoever remains<br/>
After great death.<br/>
<br/>
And too, when all is said,<br/>
What evil lust of life is this so great<br/>
Subdues us to live, so dreadfully distraught<br/>
In perils and alarms? one fixed end<br/>
Of life abideth for mortality;<br/>
Death's not to shun, and we must go to meet.<br/>
Besides we're busied with the same devices,<br/>
Ever and ever, and we are at them ever,<br/>
And there's no new delight that may be forged<br/>
By living on. But whilst the thing we long for<br/>
Is lacking, that seems good above all else;<br/>
Thereafter, when we've touched it, something else<br/>
We long for; ever one equal thirst of life<br/>
Grips us agape. And doubtful 'tis what fortune<br/>
The future times may carry, or what be<br/>
That chance may bring, or what the issue next<br/>
Awaiting us. Nor by prolonging life<br/>
Take we the least away from death's own time,<br/>
Nor can we pluck one moment off, whereby<br/>
To minish the aeons of our state of death.<br/>
Therefore, O man, by living on, fulfil<br/>
As many generations as thou may:<br/>
Eternal death shall there be waiting still;<br/>
And he who died with light of yesterday<br/>
Shall be no briefer time in death's No-more<br/>
Than he who perished months or years before.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> BOOK IV </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> PROEM </h2>
<p>I wander afield, thriving in sturdy thought,<br/>
Through unpathed haunts of the Pierides,<br/>
Trodden by step of none before. I joy<br/>
To come on undefiled fountains there,<br/>
To drain them deep; I joy to pluck new flowers,<br/>
To seek for this my head a signal crown<br/>
From regions where the Muses never yet<br/>
Have garlanded the temples of a man:<br/>
First, since I teach concerning mighty things,<br/>
And go right on to loose from round the mind<br/>
The tightened coils of dread religion;<br/>
Next, since, concerning themes so dark, I frame<br/>
Song so pellucid, touching all throughout<br/>
Even with the Muses' charm—which, as 'twould seem,<br/>
Is not without a reasonable ground:<br/>
For as physicians, when they seek to give<br/>
Young boys the nauseous wormwood, first do touch<br/>
The brim around the cup with the sweet juice<br/>
And yellow of the honey, in order that<br/>
The thoughtless age of boyhood be cajoled<br/>
As far as the lips, and meanwhile swallow down<br/>
The wormwood's bitter draught, and, though befooled,<br/>
Be yet not merely duped, but rather thus<br/>
Grow strong again with recreated health:<br/>
So now I too (since this my doctrine seems<br/>
In general somewhat woeful unto those<br/>
Who've had it not in hand, and since the crowd<br/>
Starts back from it in horror) have desired<br/>
To expound our doctrine unto thee in song<br/>
Soft-speaking and Pierian, and, as 'twere,<br/>
To touch it with sweet honey of the Muse—<br/>
If by such method haply I might hold<br/>
The mind of thee upon these lines of ours,<br/>
Till thou dost learn the nature of all things<br/>
And understandest their utility.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> EXISTENCE AND CHARACTER OF THE IMAGES </h2>
<p>But since I've taught already of what sort<br/>
The seeds of all things are, and how distinct<br/>
In divers forms they flit of own accord,<br/>
Stirred with a motion everlasting on,<br/>
And in what mode things be from them create,<br/>
And since I've taught what the mind's nature is,<br/>
And of what things 'tis with the body knit<br/>
And thrives in strength, and by what mode uptorn<br/>
That mind returns to its primordials,<br/>
Now will I undertake an argument—<br/>
One for these matters of supreme concern—<br/>
That there exist those somewhats which we call<br/>
The images of things: these, like to films<br/>
Scaled off the utmost outside of the things,<br/>
Flit hither and thither through the atmosphere,<br/>
And the same terrify our intellects,<br/>
Coming upon us waking or in sleep,<br/>
When oft we peer at wonderful strange shapes<br/>
And images of people lorn of light,<br/>
Which oft have horribly roused us when we lay<br/>
In slumber—that haply nevermore may we<br/>
Suppose that souls get loose from Acheron,<br/>
Or shades go floating in among the living,<br/>
Or aught of us is left behind at death,<br/>
When body and mind, destroyed together, each<br/>
Back to its own primordials goes away.<br/>
<br/>
And thus I say that effigies of things,<br/>
And tenuous shapes from off the things are sent,<br/>
From off the utmost outside of the things,<br/>
Which are like films or may be named a rind,<br/>
Because the image bears like look and form<br/>
With whatso body has shed it fluttering forth—<br/>
A fact thou mayst, however dull thy wits,<br/>
Well learn from this: mainly, because we see<br/>
Even 'mongst visible objects many be<br/>
That send forth bodies, loosely some diffused—<br/>
Like smoke from oaken logs and heat from fires—<br/>
And some more interwoven and condensed—<br/>
As when the locusts in the summertime<br/>
Put off their glossy tunics, or when calves<br/>
At birth drop membranes from their body's surface,<br/>
Or when, again, the slippery serpent doffs<br/>
Its vestments 'mongst the thorns—for oft we see<br/>
The breres augmented with their flying spoils:<br/>
Since such takes place, 'tis likewise certain too<br/>
That tenuous images from things are sent,<br/>
From off the utmost outside of the things.<br/>
For why those kinds should drop and part from things,<br/>
Rather than others tenuous and thin,<br/>
No power has man to open mouth to tell;<br/>
Especially, since on outsides of things<br/>
Are bodies many and minute which could,<br/>
In the same order which they had before,<br/>
And with the figure of their form preserved,<br/>
Be thrown abroad, and much more swiftly too,<br/>
Being less subject to impediments,<br/>
As few in number and placed along the front.<br/>
For truly many things we see discharge<br/>
Their stuff at large, not only from their cores<br/>
Deep-set within, as we have said above,<br/>
But from their surfaces at times no less—<br/>
Their very colours too. And commonly<br/>
The awnings, saffron, red and dusky blue,<br/>
Stretched overhead in mighty theatres,<br/>
Upon their poles and cross-beams fluttering,<br/>
Have such an action quite; for there they dye<br/>
And make to undulate with their every hue<br/>
The circled throng below, and all the stage,<br/>
And rich attire in the patrician seats.<br/>
And ever the more the theatre's dark walls<br/>
Around them shut, the more all things within<br/>
Laugh in the bright suffusion of strange glints,<br/>
The daylight being withdrawn. And therefore, since<br/>
The canvas hangings thus discharge their dye<br/>
From off their surface, things in general must<br/>
Likewise their tenuous effigies discharge,<br/>
Because in either case they are off-thrown<br/>
From off the surface. So there are indeed<br/>
Such certain prints and vestiges of forms<br/>
Which flit around, of subtlest texture made,<br/>
Invisible, when separate, each and one.<br/>
Again, all odour, smoke, and heat, and such<br/>
Streams out of things diffusedly, because,<br/>
Whilst coming from the deeps of body forth<br/>
And rising out, along their bending path<br/>
They're torn asunder, nor have gateways straight<br/>
Wherethrough to mass themselves and struggle abroad.<br/>
But contrariwise, when such a tenuous film<br/>
Of outside colour is thrown off, there's naught<br/>
Can rend it, since 'tis placed along the front<br/>
Ready to hand. Lastly those images<br/>
Which to our eyes in mirrors do appear,<br/>
In water, or in any shining surface,<br/>
Must be, since furnished with like look of things,<br/>
Fashioned from images of things sent out.<br/>
There are, then, tenuous effigies of forms,<br/>
Like unto them, which no one can divine<br/>
When taken singly, which do yet give back,<br/>
When by continued and recurrent discharge<br/>
Expelled, a picture from the mirrors' plane.<br/>
Nor otherwise, it seems, can they be kept<br/>
So well conserved that thus be given back<br/>
Figures so like each object.<br/>
<br/>
Now then, learn<br/>
How tenuous is the nature of an image.<br/>
And in the first place, since primordials be<br/>
So far beneath our senses, and much less<br/>
E'en than those objects which begin to grow<br/>
Too small for eyes to note, learn now in few<br/>
How nice are the beginnings of all things—<br/>
That this, too, I may yet confirm in proof:<br/>
First, living creatures are sometimes so small<br/>
That even their third part can nowise be seen;<br/>
Judge, then, the size of any inward organ—<br/>
What of their sphered heart, their eyes, their limbs,<br/>
The skeleton?—How tiny thus they are!<br/>
And what besides of those first particles<br/>
Whence soul and mind must fashioned be?—Seest not<br/>
How nice and how minute? Besides, whatever<br/>
Exhales from out its body a sharp smell—<br/>
The nauseous absinth, or the panacea,<br/>
Strong southernwood, or bitter centaury—<br/>
If never so lightly with thy [fingers] twain<br/>
Perchance [thou touch] a one of them<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Then why not rather know that images<br/>
Flit hither and thither, many, in many modes,<br/>
Bodiless and invisible?<br/>
<br/>
But lest<br/>
Haply thou holdest that those images<br/>
Which come from objects are the sole that flit,<br/>
Others indeed there be of own accord<br/>
Begot, self-formed in earth's aery skies,<br/>
Which, moulded to innumerable shapes,<br/>
Are borne aloft, and, fluid as they are,<br/>
Cease not to change appearance and to turn<br/>
Into new outlines of all sorts of forms;<br/>
As we behold the clouds grow thick on high<br/>
And smirch the serene vision of the world,<br/>
Stroking the air with motions. For oft are seen<br/>
The giants' faces flying far along<br/>
And trailing a spread of shadow; and at times<br/>
The mighty mountains and mountain-sundered rocks<br/>
Going before and crossing on the sun,<br/>
Whereafter a monstrous beast dragging amain<br/>
And leading in the other thunderheads.<br/>
Now [hear] how easy and how swift they be<br/>
Engendered, and perpetually flow off<br/>
From things and gliding pass away....<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>For ever every outside streams away<br/>
From off all objects, since discharge they may;<br/>
And when this outside reaches other things,<br/>
As chiefly glass, it passes through; but where<br/>
It reaches the rough rocks or stuff of wood,<br/>
There 'tis so rent that it cannot give back<br/>
An image. But when gleaming objects dense,<br/>
As chiefly mirrors, have been set before it,<br/>
Nothing of this sort happens. For it can't<br/>
Go, as through glass, nor yet be rent—its safety,<br/>
By virtue of that smoothness, being sure.<br/>
'Tis therefore that from them the images<br/>
Stream back to us; and howso suddenly<br/>
Thou place, at any instant, anything<br/>
Before a mirror, there an image shows;<br/>
Proving that ever from a body's surface<br/>
Flow off thin textures and thin shapes of things.<br/>
Thus many images in little time<br/>
Are gendered; so their origin is named<br/>
Rightly a speedy. And even as the sun<br/>
Must send below, in little time, to earth<br/>
So many beams to keep all things so full<br/>
Of light incessant; thus, on grounds the same,<br/>
From things there must be borne, in many modes,<br/>
To every quarter round, upon the moment,<br/>
The many images of things; because<br/>
Unto whatever face of things we turn<br/>
The mirror, things of form and hue the same<br/>
Respond. Besides, though but a moment since<br/>
Serenest was the weather of the sky,<br/>
So fiercely sudden is it foully thick<br/>
That ye might think that round about all murk<br/>
Had parted forth from Acheron and filled<br/>
The mighty vaults of sky—so grievously,<br/>
As gathers thus the storm-clouds' gruesome night,<br/>
Do faces of black horror hang on high—<br/>
Of which how small a part an image is<br/>
There's none to tell or reckon out in words.<br/>
<br/>
Now come; with what swift motion they are borne,<br/>
These images, and what the speed assigned<br/>
To them across the breezes swimming on—<br/>
So that o'er lengths of space a little hour<br/>
Alone is wasted, toward whatever region<br/>
Each with its divers impulse tends—I'll tell<br/>
In verses sweeter than they many are;<br/>
Even as the swan's slight note is better far<br/>
Than that dispersed clamour of the cranes<br/>
Among the southwind's aery clouds. And first,<br/>
One oft may see that objects which are light<br/>
And made of tiny bodies are the swift;<br/>
In which class is the sun's light and his heat,<br/>
Since made from small primordial elements<br/>
Which, as it were, are forward knocked along<br/>
And through the interspaces of the air<br/>
To pass delay not, urged by blows behind;<br/>
For light by light is instantly supplied<br/>
And gleam by following gleam is spurred and driven.<br/>
Thus likewise must the images have power<br/>
Through unimaginable space to speed<br/>
Within a point of time,—first, since a cause<br/>
Exceeding small there is, which at their back<br/>
Far forward drives them and propels, where, too,<br/>
They're carried with such winged lightness on;<br/>
And, secondly, since furnished, when sent off,<br/>
With texture of such rareness that they can<br/>
Through objects whatsoever penetrate<br/>
And ooze, as 'twere, through intervening air.<br/>
Besides, if those fine particles of things<br/>
Which from so deep within are sent abroad,<br/>
As light and heat of sun, are seen to glide<br/>
And spread themselves through all the space of heaven<br/>
Upon one instant of the day, and fly<br/>
O'er sea and lands and flood the heaven, what then<br/>
Of those which on the outside stand prepared,<br/>
When they're hurled off with not a thing to check<br/>
Their going out? Dost thou not see indeed<br/>
How swifter and how farther must they go<br/>
And speed through manifold the length of space<br/>
In time the same that from the sun the rays<br/>
O'erspread the heaven? This also seems to be<br/>
Example chief and true with what swift speed<br/>
The images of things are borne about:<br/>
That soon as ever under open skies<br/>
Is spread the shining water, all at once,<br/>
If stars be out in heaven, upgleam from earth,<br/>
Serene and radiant in the water there,<br/>
The constellations of the universe—<br/>
Now seest thou not in what a point of time<br/>
An image from the shores of ether falls<br/>
Unto the shores of earth? Wherefore, again,<br/>
And yet again, 'tis needful to confess<br/>
With wondrous...<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE SENSES AND MENTAL PICTURES </h2>
<p>Bodies that strike the eyes, awaking sight.<br/>
From certain things flow odours evermore,<br/>
As cold from rivers, heat from sun, and spray<br/>
From waves of ocean, eater-out of walls<br/>
Around the coasts. Nor ever cease to flit<br/>
The varied voices, sounds athrough the air.<br/>
Then too there comes into the mouth at times<br/>
The wet of a salt taste, when by the sea<br/>
We roam about; and so, whene'er we watch<br/>
The wormword being mixed, its bitter stings.<br/>
To such degree from all things is each thing<br/>
Borne streamingly along, and sent about<br/>
To every region round; and nature grants<br/>
Nor rest nor respite of the onward flow,<br/>
Since 'tis incessantly we feeling have,<br/>
And all the time are suffered to descry<br/>
And smell all things at hand, and hear them sound.<br/>
Besides, since shape examined by our hands<br/>
Within the dark is known to be the same<br/>
As that by eyes perceived within the light<br/>
And lustrous day, both touch and sight must be<br/>
By one like cause aroused. So, if we test<br/>
A square and get its stimulus on us<br/>
Within the dark, within the light what square<br/>
Can fall upon our sight, except a square<br/>
That images the things? Wherefore it seems<br/>
The source of seeing is in images,<br/>
Nor without these can anything be viewed.<br/>
<br/>
Now these same films I name are borne about<br/>
And tossed and scattered into regions all.<br/>
But since we do perceive alone through eyes,<br/>
It follows hence that whitherso we turn<br/>
Our sight, all things do strike against it there<br/>
With form and hue. And just how far from us<br/>
Each thing may be away, the image yields<br/>
To us the power to see and chance to tell:<br/>
For when 'tis sent, at once it shoves ahead<br/>
And drives along the air that's in the space<br/>
Betwixt it and our eyes. And thus this air<br/>
All glides athrough our eyeballs, and, as 'twere,<br/>
Brushes athrough our pupils and thuswise<br/>
Passes across. Therefore it comes we see<br/>
How far from us each thing may be away,<br/>
And the more air there be that's driven before,<br/>
And too the longer be the brushing breeze<br/>
Against our eyes, the farther off removed<br/>
Each thing is seen to be: forsooth, this work<br/>
With mightily swift order all goes on,<br/>
So that upon one instant we may see<br/>
What kind the object and how far away.<br/>
<br/>
Nor over-marvellous must this be deemed<br/>
In these affairs that, though the films which strike<br/>
Upon the eyes cannot be singly seen,<br/>
The things themselves may be perceived. For thus<br/>
When the wind beats upon us stroke by stroke<br/>
And when the sharp cold streams, 'tis not our wont<br/>
To feel each private particle of wind<br/>
Or of that cold, but rather all at once;<br/>
And so we see how blows affect our body,<br/>
As if one thing were beating on the same<br/>
And giving us the feel of its own body<br/>
Outside of us. Again, whene'er we thump<br/>
With finger-tip upon a stone, we touch<br/>
But the rock's surface and the outer hue,<br/>
Nor feel that hue by contact—rather feel<br/>
The very hardness deep within the rock.<br/>
<br/>
Now come, and why beyond a looking-glass<br/>
An image may be seen, perceive. For seen<br/>
It soothly is, removed far within.<br/>
'Tis the same sort as objects peered upon<br/>
Outside in their true shape, whene'er a door<br/>
Yields through itself an open peering-place,<br/>
And lets us see so many things outside<br/>
Beyond the house. Also that sight is made<br/>
By a twofold twin air: for first is seen<br/>
The air inside the door-posts; next the doors,<br/>
The twain to left and right; and afterwards<br/>
A light beyond comes brushing through our eyes,<br/>
Then other air, then objects peered upon<br/>
Outside in their true shape. And thus, when first<br/>
The image of the glass projects itself,<br/>
As to our gaze it comes, it shoves ahead<br/>
And drives along the air that's in the space<br/>
Betwixt it and our eyes, and brings to pass<br/>
That we perceive the air ere yet the glass.<br/>
But when we've also seen the glass itself,<br/>
Forthwith that image which from us is borne<br/>
Reaches the glass, and there thrown back again<br/>
Comes back unto our eyes, and driving rolls<br/>
Ahead of itself another air, that then<br/>
'Tis this we see before itself, and thus<br/>
It looks so far removed behind the glass.<br/>
Wherefore again, again, there's naught for wonder<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>In those which render from the mirror's plane<br/>
A vision back, since each thing comes to pass<br/>
By means of the two airs. Now, in the glass<br/>
The right part of our members is observed<br/>
Upon the left, because, when comes the image<br/>
Hitting against the level of the glass,<br/>
'Tis not returned unshifted; but forced off<br/>
Backwards in line direct and not oblique,—<br/>
Exactly as whoso his plaster-mask<br/>
Should dash, before 'twere dry, on post or beam,<br/>
And it should straightway keep, at clinging there,<br/>
Its shape, reversed, facing him who threw,<br/>
And so remould the features it gives back:<br/>
It comes that now the right eye is the left,<br/>
The left the right. An image too may be<br/>
From mirror into mirror handed on,<br/>
Until of idol-films even five or six<br/>
Have thus been gendered. For whatever things<br/>
Shall hide back yonder in the house, the same,<br/>
However far removed in twisting ways,<br/>
May still be all brought forth through bending paths<br/>
And by these several mirrors seen to be<br/>
Within the house, since nature so compels<br/>
All things to be borne backward and spring off<br/>
At equal angles from all other things.<br/>
To such degree the image gleams across<br/>
From mirror unto mirror; where 'twas left<br/>
It comes to be the right, and then again<br/>
Returns and changes round unto the left.<br/>
Again, those little sides of mirrors curved<br/>
Proportionate to the bulge of our own flank<br/>
Send back to us their idols with the right<br/>
Upon the right; and this is so because<br/>
Either the image is passed on along<br/>
From mirror unto mirror, and thereafter,<br/>
When twice dashed off, flies back unto ourselves;<br/>
Or else the image wheels itself around,<br/>
When once unto the mirror it has come,<br/>
Since the curved surface teaches it to turn<br/>
To usward. Further, thou might'st well believe<br/>
That these film-idols step along with us<br/>
And set their feet in unison with ours<br/>
And imitate our carriage, since from that<br/>
Part of a mirror whence thou hast withdrawn<br/>
Straightway no images can be returned.<br/>
<br/>
Further, our eye-balls tend to flee the bright<br/>
And shun to gaze thereon; the sun even blinds,<br/>
If thou goest on to strain them unto him,<br/>
Because his strength is mighty, and the films<br/>
Heavily downward from on high are borne<br/>
Through the pure ether and the viewless winds,<br/>
And strike the eyes, disordering their joints.<br/>
So piecing lustre often burns the eyes,<br/>
Because it holdeth many seeds of fire<br/>
Which, working into eyes, engender pain.<br/>
Again, whatever jaundiced people view<br/>
Becomes wan-yellow, since from out their bodies<br/>
Flow many seeds wan-yellow forth to meet<br/>
The films of things, and many too are mixed<br/>
Within their eye, which by contagion paint<br/>
All things with sallowness. Again, we view<br/>
From dark recesses things that stand in light,<br/>
Because, when first has entered and possessed<br/>
The open eyes this nearer darkling air,<br/>
Swiftly the shining air and luminous<br/>
Followeth in, which purges then the eyes<br/>
And scatters asunder of that other air<br/>
The sable shadows, for in large degrees<br/>
This air is nimbler, nicer, and more strong.<br/>
And soon as ever 'thas filled and oped with light<br/>
The pathways of the eyeballs, which before<br/>
Black air had blocked, there follow straightaway<br/>
Those films of things out-standing in the light,<br/>
Provoking vision—what we cannot do<br/>
From out the light with objects in the dark,<br/>
Because that denser darkling air behind<br/>
Followeth in, and fills each aperture<br/>
And thus blockades the pathways of the eyes<br/>
That there no images of any things<br/>
Can be thrown in and agitate the eyes.<br/>
<br/>
And when from far away we do behold<br/>
The squared towers of a city, oft<br/>
Rounded they seem,—on this account because<br/>
Each distant angle is perceived obtuse,<br/>
Or rather it is not perceived at all;<br/>
And perishes its blow nor to our gaze<br/>
Arrives its stroke, since through such length of air<br/>
Are borne along the idols that the air<br/>
Makes blunt the idol of the angle's point<br/>
By numerous collidings. When thuswise<br/>
The angles of the tower each and all<br/>
Have quite escaped the sense, the stones appear<br/>
As rubbed and rounded on a turner's wheel—<br/>
Yet not like objects near and truly round,<br/>
But with a semblance to them, shadowily.<br/>
Likewise, our shadow in the sun appears<br/>
To move along and follow our own steps<br/>
And imitate our carriage—if thou thinkest<br/>
Air that is thus bereft of light can walk,<br/>
Following the gait and motion of mankind.<br/>
For what we use to name a shadow, sure<br/>
Is naught but air deprived of light. No marvel:<br/>
Because the earth from spot to spot is reft<br/>
Progressively of light of sun, whenever<br/>
In moving round we get within its way,<br/>
While any spot of earth by us abandoned<br/>
Is filled with light again, on this account<br/>
It comes to pass that what was body's shadow<br/>
Seems still the same to follow after us<br/>
In one straight course. Since, evermore pour in<br/>
New lights of rays, and perish then the old,<br/>
Just like the wool that's drawn into the flame.<br/>
Therefore the earth is easily spoiled of light<br/>
And easily refilled and from herself<br/>
Washeth the black shadows quite away.<br/>
<br/>
And yet in this we don't at all concede<br/>
That eyes be cheated. For their task it is<br/>
To note in whatsoever place be light,<br/>
In what be shadow: whether or no the gleams<br/>
Be still the same, and whether the shadow which<br/>
Just now was here is that one passing thither,<br/>
Or whether the facts be what we said above,<br/>
'Tis after all the reasoning of mind<br/>
That must decide; nor can our eyeballs know<br/>
The nature of reality. And so<br/>
Attach thou not this fault of mind to eyes,<br/>
Nor lightly think our senses everywhere<br/>
Are tottering. The ship in which we sail<br/>
Is borne along, although it seems to stand;<br/>
The ship that bides in roadstead is supposed<br/>
There to be passing by. And hills and fields<br/>
Seem fleeing fast astern, past which we urge<br/>
The ship and fly under the bellying sails.<br/>
The stars, each one, do seem to pause, affixed<br/>
To the ethereal caverns, though they all<br/>
Forever are in motion, rising out<br/>
And thence revisiting their far descents<br/>
When they have measured with their bodies bright<br/>
The span of heaven. And likewise sun and moon<br/>
Seem biding in a roadstead,—objects which,<br/>
As plain fact proves, are really borne along.<br/>
Between two mountains far away aloft<br/>
From midst the whirl of waters open lies<br/>
A gaping exit for the fleet, and yet<br/>
They seem conjoined in a single isle.<br/>
When boys themselves have stopped their spinning round,<br/>
The halls still seem to whirl and posts to reel,<br/>
Until they now must almost think the roofs<br/>
Threaten to ruin down upon their heads.<br/>
And now, when nature begins to lift on high<br/>
The sun's red splendour and the tremulous fires,<br/>
And raise him o'er the mountain-tops, those mountains—<br/>
O'er which he seemeth then to thee to be,<br/>
His glowing self hard by atingeing them<br/>
With his own fire—are yet away from us<br/>
Scarcely two thousand arrow-shots, indeed<br/>
Oft scarce five hundred courses of a dart;<br/>
Although between those mountains and the sun<br/>
Lie the huge plains of ocean spread beneath<br/>
The vasty shores of ether, and intervene<br/>
A thousand lands, possessed by many a folk<br/>
And generations of wild beasts. Again,<br/>
A pool of water of but a finger's depth,<br/>
Which lies between the stones along the pave,<br/>
Offers a vision downward into earth<br/>
As far, as from the earth o'erspread on high<br/>
The gulfs of heaven; that thus thou seemest to view<br/>
Clouds down below and heavenly bodies plunged<br/>
Wondrously in heaven under earth.<br/>
Then too, when in the middle of the stream<br/>
Sticks fast our dashing horse, and down we gaze<br/>
Into the river's rapid waves, some force<br/>
Seems then to bear the body of the horse,<br/>
Though standing still, reversely from his course,<br/>
And swiftly push up-stream. And wheresoe'er<br/>
We cast our eyes across, all objects seem<br/>
Thus to be onward borne and flow along<br/>
In the same way as we. A portico,<br/>
Albeit it stands well propped from end to end<br/>
On equal columns, parallel and big,<br/>
Contracts by stages in a narrow cone,<br/>
When from one end the long, long whole is seen,—<br/>
Until, conjoining ceiling with the floor,<br/>
And the whole right side with the left, it draws<br/>
Together to a cone's nigh-viewless point.<br/>
To sailors on the main the sun he seems<br/>
From out the waves to rise, and in the waves<br/>
To set and bury his light—because indeed<br/>
They gaze on naught but water and the sky.<br/>
Again, to gazers ignorant of the sea,<br/>
Vessels in port seem, as with broken poops,<br/>
To lean upon the water, quite agog;<br/>
For any portion of the oars that's raised<br/>
Above the briny spray is straight, and straight<br/>
The rudders from above. But other parts,<br/>
Those sunk, immersed below the water-line,<br/>
Seem broken all and bended and inclined<br/>
Sloping to upwards, and turned back to float<br/>
Almost atop the water. And when the winds<br/>
Carry the scattered drifts along the sky<br/>
In the night-time, then seem to glide along<br/>
The radiant constellations 'gainst the clouds<br/>
And there on high to take far other course<br/>
From that whereon in truth they're borne. And then,<br/>
If haply our hand be set beneath one eye<br/>
And press below thereon, then to our gaze<br/>
Each object which we gaze on seems to be,<br/>
By some sensation twain—then twain the lights<br/>
Of lampions burgeoning in flowers of flame,<br/>
And twain the furniture in all the house,<br/>
Two-fold the visages of fellow-men,<br/>
And twain their bodies. And again, when sleep<br/>
Has bound our members down in slumber soft<br/>
And all the body lies in deep repose,<br/>
Yet then we seem to self to be awake<br/>
And move our members; and in night's blind gloom<br/>
We think to mark the daylight and the sun;<br/>
And, shut within a room, yet still we seem<br/>
To change our skies, our oceans, rivers, hills,<br/>
To cross the plains afoot, and hear new sounds,<br/>
Though still the austere silence of the night<br/>
Abides around us, and to speak replies,<br/>
Though voiceless. Other cases of the sort<br/>
Wondrously many do we see, which all<br/>
Seek, so to say, to injure faith in sense—<br/>
In vain, because the largest part of these<br/>
Deceives through mere opinions of the mind,<br/>
Which we do add ourselves, feigning to see<br/>
What by the senses are not seen at all.<br/>
For naught is harder than to separate<br/>
Plain facts from dubious, which the mind forthwith<br/>
Adds by itself.<br/>
<br/>
Again, if one suppose<br/>
That naught is known, he knows not whether this<br/>
Itself is able to be known, since he<br/>
Confesses naught to know. Therefore with him<br/>
I waive discussion—who has set his head<br/>
Even where his feet should be. But let me grant<br/>
That this he knows,—I question: whence he knows<br/>
What 'tis to know and not-to-know in turn,<br/>
And what created concept of the truth,<br/>
And what device has proved the dubious<br/>
To differ from the certain?—since in things<br/>
He's heretofore seen naught of true. Thou'lt find<br/>
That from the senses first hath been create<br/>
Concept of truth, nor can the senses be<br/>
Rebutted. For criterion must be found<br/>
Worthy of greater trust, which shall defeat<br/>
Through own authority the false by true;<br/>
What, then, than these our senses must there be<br/>
Worthy a greater trust? Shall reason, sprung<br/>
From some false sense, prevail to contradict<br/>
Those senses, sprung as reason wholly is<br/>
From out the senses?—For lest these be true,<br/>
All reason also then is falsified.<br/>
Or shall the ears have power to blame the eyes,<br/>
Or yet the touch the ears? Again, shall taste<br/>
Accuse this touch or shall the nose confute<br/>
Or eyes defeat it? Methinks not so it is:<br/>
For unto each has been divided off<br/>
Its function quite apart, its power to each;<br/>
And thus we're still constrained to perceive<br/>
The soft, the cold, the hot apart, apart<br/>
All divers hues and whatso things there be<br/>
Conjoined with hues. Likewise the tasting tongue<br/>
Has its own power apart, and smells apart<br/>
And sounds apart are known. And thus it is<br/>
That no one sense can e'er convict another.<br/>
Nor shall one sense have power to blame itself,<br/>
Because it always must be deemed the same,<br/>
Worthy of equal trust. And therefore what<br/>
At any time unto these senses showed,<br/>
The same is true. And if the reason be<br/>
Unable to unravel us the cause<br/>
Why objects, which at hand were square, afar<br/>
Seemed rounded, yet it more availeth us,<br/>
Lacking the reason, to pretend a cause<br/>
For each configuration, than to let<br/>
From out our hands escape the obvious things<br/>
And injure primal faith in sense, and wreck<br/>
All those foundations upon which do rest<br/>
Our life and safety. For not only reason<br/>
Would topple down; but even our very life<br/>
Would straightaway collapse, unless we dared<br/>
To trust our senses and to keep away<br/>
From headlong heights and places to be shunned<br/>
Of a like peril, and to seek with speed<br/>
Their opposites! Again, as in a building,<br/>
If the first plumb-line be askew, and if<br/>
The square deceiving swerve from lines exact,<br/>
And if the level waver but the least<br/>
In any part, the whole construction then<br/>
Must turn out faulty—shelving and askew,<br/>
Leaning to back and front, incongruous,<br/>
That now some portions seem about to fall,<br/>
And falls the whole ere long—betrayed indeed<br/>
By first deceiving estimates: so too<br/>
Thy calculations in affairs of life<br/>
Must be askew and false, if sprung for thee<br/>
From senses false. So all that troop of words<br/>
Marshalled against the senses is quite vain.<br/>
<br/>
And now remains to demonstrate with ease<br/>
How other senses each their things perceive.<br/>
<br/>
Firstly, a sound and every voice is heard,<br/>
When, getting into ears, they strike the sense<br/>
With their own body. For confess we must<br/>
Even voice and sound to be corporeal,<br/>
Because they're able on the sense to strike.<br/>
Besides voice often scrapes against the throat,<br/>
And screams in going out do make more rough<br/>
The wind-pipe—naturally enough, methinks,<br/>
When, through the narrow exit rising up<br/>
In larger throng, these primal germs of voice<br/>
Have thus begun to issue forth. In sooth,<br/>
Also the door of the mouth is scraped against<br/>
[By air blown outward] from distended [cheeks].<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>And thus no doubt there is, that voice and words<br/>
Consist of elements corporeal,<br/>
With power to pain. Nor art thou unaware<br/>
Likewise how much of body's ta'en away,<br/>
How much from very thews and powers of men<br/>
May be withdrawn by steady talk, prolonged<br/>
Even from the rising splendour of the morn<br/>
To shadows of black evening,—above all<br/>
If 't be outpoured with most exceeding shouts.<br/>
Therefore the voice must be corporeal,<br/>
Since the long talker loses from his frame<br/>
A part.<br/>
<br/>
Moreover, roughness in the sound<br/>
Comes from the roughness in the primal germs,<br/>
As a smooth sound from smooth ones is create;<br/>
Nor have these elements a form the same<br/>
When the trump rumbles with a hollow roar,<br/>
As when barbaric Berecynthian pipe<br/>
Buzzes with raucous boomings, or when swans<br/>
By night from icy shores of Helicon<br/>
With wailing voices raise their liquid dirge.<br/>
<br/>
Thus, when from deep within our frame we force<br/>
These voices, and at mouth expel them forth,<br/>
The mobile tongue, artificer of words,<br/>
Makes them articulate, and too the lips<br/>
By their formations share in shaping them.<br/>
Hence when the space is short from starting-point<br/>
To where that voice arrives, the very words<br/>
Must too be plainly heard, distinctly marked.<br/>
For then the voice conserves its own formation,<br/>
Conserves its shape. But if the space between<br/>
Be longer than is fit, the words must be<br/>
Through the much air confounded, and the voice<br/>
Disordered in its flight across the winds—<br/>
And so it haps, that thou canst sound perceive,<br/>
Yet not determine what the words may mean;<br/>
To such degree confounded and encumbered<br/>
The voice approaches us. Again, one word,<br/>
Sent from the crier's mouth, may rouse all ears<br/>
Among the populace. And thus one voice<br/>
Scatters asunder into many voices,<br/>
Since it divides itself for separate ears,<br/>
Imprinting form of word and a clear tone.<br/>
But whatso part of voices fails to hit<br/>
The ears themselves perishes, borne beyond,<br/>
Idly diffused among the winds. A part,<br/>
Beating on solid porticoes, tossed back<br/>
Returns a sound; and sometimes mocks the ear<br/>
With a mere phantom of a word. When this<br/>
Thou well hast noted, thou canst render count<br/>
Unto thyself and others why it is<br/>
Along the lonely places that the rocks<br/>
Give back like shapes of words in order like,<br/>
When search we after comrades wandering<br/>
Among the shady mountains, and aloud<br/>
Call unto them, the scattered. I have seen<br/>
Spots that gave back even voices six or seven<br/>
For one thrown forth—for so the very hills,<br/>
Dashing them back against the hills, kept on<br/>
With their reverberations. And these spots<br/>
The neighbouring country-side doth feign to be<br/>
Haunts of the goat-foot satyrs and the nymphs;<br/>
And tells ye there be fauns, by whose night noise<br/>
And antic revels yonder they declare<br/>
The voiceless silences are broken oft,<br/>
And tones of strings are made and wailings sweet<br/>
Which the pipe, beat by players' finger-tips,<br/>
Pours out; and far and wide the farmer-race<br/>
Begins to hear, when, shaking the garmentings<br/>
Of pine upon his half-beast head, god-Pan<br/>
With puckered lip oft runneth o'er and o'er<br/>
The open reeds,—lest flute should cease to pour<br/>
The woodland music! Other prodigies<br/>
And wonders of this ilk they love to tell,<br/>
Lest they be thought to dwell in lonely spots<br/>
And even by gods deserted. This is why<br/>
They boast of marvels in their story-tellings;<br/>
Or by some other reason are led on—<br/>
Greedy, as all mankind hath ever been,<br/>
To prattle fables into ears.<br/>
<br/>
Again,<br/>
One need not wonder how it comes about<br/>
That through those places (through which eyes cannot<br/>
View objects manifest) sounds yet may pass<br/>
And assail the ears. For often we observe<br/>
People conversing, though the doors be closed;<br/>
No marvel either, since all voice unharmed<br/>
Can wind through bended apertures of things,<br/>
While idol-films decline to—for they're rent,<br/>
Unless along straight apertures they swim,<br/>
Like those in glass, through which all images<br/>
Do fly across. And yet this voice itself,<br/>
In passing through shut chambers of a house,<br/>
Is dulled, and in a jumble enters ears,<br/>
And sound we seem to hear far more than words.<br/>
Moreover, a voice is into all directions<br/>
Divided up, since off from one another<br/>
New voices are engendered, when one voice<br/>
Hath once leapt forth, outstarting into many—<br/>
As oft a spark of fire is wont to sprinkle<br/>
Itself into its several fires. And so,<br/>
Voices do fill those places hid behind,<br/>
Which all are in a hubbub round about,<br/>
Astir with sound. But idol-films do tend,<br/>
As once sent forth, in straight directions all;<br/>
Wherefore one can inside a wall see naught,<br/>
Yet catch the voices from beyond the same.<br/>
<br/>
Nor tongue and palate, whereby we flavour feel,<br/>
Present more problems for more work of thought.<br/>
Firstly, we feel a flavour in the mouth,<br/>
When forth we squeeze it, in chewing up our food,—<br/>
As any one perchance begins to squeeze<br/>
With hand and dry a sponge with water soaked.<br/>
Next, all which forth we squeeze is spread about<br/>
Along the pores and intertwined paths<br/>
Of the loose-textured tongue. And so, when smooth<br/>
The bodies of the oozy flavour, then<br/>
Delightfully they touch, delightfully<br/>
They treat all spots, around the wet and trickling<br/>
Enclosures of the tongue. And contrariwise,<br/>
They sting and pain the sense with their assault,<br/>
According as with roughness they're supplied.<br/>
Next, only up to palate is the pleasure<br/>
Coming from flavour; for in truth when down<br/>
'Thas plunged along the throat, no pleasure is,<br/>
Whilst into all the frame it spreads around;<br/>
Nor aught it matters with what food is fed<br/>
The body, if only what thou take thou canst<br/>
Distribute well digested to the frame<br/>
And keep the stomach in a moist career.<br/>
<br/>
Now, how it is we see some food for some,<br/>
Others for others....<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>I will unfold, or wherefore what to some<br/>
Is foul and bitter, yet the same to others<br/>
Can seem delectable to eat,—why here<br/>
So great the distance and the difference is<br/>
That what is food to one to some becomes<br/>
Fierce poison, as a certain snake there is<br/>
Which, touched by spittle of a man, will waste<br/>
And end itself by gnawing up its coil.<br/>
Again, fierce poison is the hellebore<br/>
To us, but puts the fat on goats and quails.<br/>
That thou mayst know by what devices this<br/>
Is brought about, in chief thou must recall<br/>
What we have said before, that seeds are kept<br/>
Commixed in things in divers modes. Again,<br/>
As all the breathing creatures which take food<br/>
Are outwardly unlike, and outer cut<br/>
And contour of their members bounds them round,<br/>
Each differing kind by kind, they thus consist<br/>
Of seeds of varying shape. And furthermore,<br/>
Since seeds do differ, divers too must be<br/>
The interstices and paths (which we do call<br/>
The apertures) in all the members, even<br/>
In mouth and palate too. Thus some must be<br/>
More small or yet more large, three-cornered some<br/>
And others squared, and many others round,<br/>
And certain of them many-angled too<br/>
In many modes. For, as the combination<br/>
And motion of their divers shapes demand,<br/>
The shapes of apertures must be diverse<br/>
And paths must vary according to their walls<br/>
That bound them. Hence when what is sweet to some,<br/>
Becomes to others bitter, for him to whom<br/>
'Tis sweet, the smoothest particles must needs<br/>
Have entered caressingly the palate's pores.<br/>
And, contrariwise, with those to whom that sweet<br/>
Is sour within the mouth, beyond a doubt<br/>
The rough and barbed particles have got<br/>
Into the narrows of the apertures.<br/>
Now easy it is from these affairs to know<br/>
Whatever...<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Indeed, where one from o'er-abundant bile<br/>
Is stricken with fever, or in other wise<br/>
Feels the roused violence of some malady,<br/>
There the whole frame is now upset, and there<br/>
All the positions of the seeds are changed,—<br/>
So that the bodies which before were fit<br/>
To cause the savour, now are fit no more,<br/>
And now more apt are others which be able<br/>
To get within the pores and gender sour.<br/>
Both sorts, in sooth, are intermixed in honey—<br/>
What oft we've proved above to thee before.<br/>
Now come, and I will indicate what wise<br/>
Impact of odour on the nostrils touches.<br/>
And first, 'tis needful there be many things<br/>
From whence the streaming flow of varied odours<br/>
May roll along, and we're constrained to think<br/>
They stream and dart and sprinkle themselves about<br/>
Impartially. But for some breathing creatures<br/>
One odour is more apt, to others another—<br/>
Because of differing forms of seeds and pores.<br/>
Thus on and on along the zephyrs bees<br/>
Are led by odour of honey, vultures too<br/>
By carcasses. Again, the forward power<br/>
Of scent in dogs doth lead the hunter on<br/>
Whithersoever the splay-foot of wild beast<br/>
Hath hastened its career; and the white goose,<br/>
The saviour of the Roman citadel,<br/>
Forescents afar the odour of mankind.<br/>
Thus, diversly to divers ones is given<br/>
Peculiar smell that leadeth each along<br/>
To his own food or makes him start aback<br/>
From loathsome poison, and in this wise are<br/>
The generations of the wild preserved.<br/>
<br/>
Yet is this pungence not alone in odours<br/>
Or in the class of flavours; but, likewise,<br/>
The look of things and hues agree not all<br/>
So well with senses unto all, but that<br/>
Some unto some will be, to gaze upon,<br/>
More keen and painful. Lo, the raving lions,<br/>
They dare not face and gaze upon the cock<br/>
Who's wont with wings to flap away the night<br/>
From off the stage, and call the beaming morn<br/>
With clarion voice—and lions straightway thus<br/>
Bethink themselves of flight, because, ye see,<br/>
Within the body of the cocks there be<br/>
Some certain seeds, which, into lions' eyes<br/>
Injected, bore into the pupils deep<br/>
And yield such piercing pain they can't hold out<br/>
Against the cocks, however fierce they be—<br/>
Whilst yet these seeds can't hurt our gaze the least,<br/>
Either because they do not penetrate,<br/>
Or since they have free exit from the eyes<br/>
As soon as penetrating, so that thus<br/>
They cannot hurt our eyes in any part<br/>
By there remaining.<br/>
<br/>
To speak once more of odour;<br/>
Whatever assail the nostrils, some can travel<br/>
A longer way than others. None of them,<br/>
However, 's borne so far as sound or voice—<br/>
While I omit all mention of such things<br/>
As hit the eyesight and assail the vision.<br/>
For slowly on a wandering course it comes<br/>
And perishes sooner, by degrees absorbed<br/>
Easily into all the winds of air;—<br/>
And first, because from deep inside the thing<br/>
It is discharged with labour (for the fact<br/>
That every object, when 'tis shivered, ground,<br/>
Or crumbled by the fire, will smell the stronger<br/>
Is sign that odours flow and part away<br/>
From inner regions of the things). And next,<br/>
Thou mayest see that odour is create<br/>
Of larger primal germs than voice, because<br/>
It enters not through stony walls, wherethrough<br/>
Unfailingly the voice and sound are borne;<br/>
Wherefore, besides, thou wilt observe 'tis not<br/>
So easy to trace out in whatso place<br/>
The smelling object is. For, dallying on<br/>
Along the winds, the particles cool off,<br/>
And then the scurrying messengers of things<br/>
Arrive our senses, when no longer hot.<br/>
So dogs oft wander astray, and hunt the scent.<br/>
<br/>
Now mark, and hear what objects move the mind,<br/>
And learn, in few, whence unto intellect<br/>
Do come what come. And first I tell thee this:<br/>
That many images of objects rove<br/>
In many modes to every region round—<br/>
So thin that easily the one with other,<br/>
When once they meet, uniteth in mid-air,<br/>
Like gossamer or gold-leaf. For, indeed,<br/>
Far thinner are they in their fabric than<br/>
Those images which take a hold on eyes<br/>
And smite the vision, since through body's pores<br/>
They penetrate, and inwardly stir up<br/>
The subtle nature of mind and smite the sense.<br/>
Thus, Centaurs and the limbs of Scyllas, thus<br/>
The Cerberus-visages of dogs we see,<br/>
And images of people gone before—<br/>
Dead men whose bones earth bosomed long ago;<br/>
Because the images of every kind<br/>
Are everywhere about us borne—in part<br/>
Those which are gendered in the very air<br/>
Of own accord, in part those others which<br/>
From divers things do part away, and those<br/>
Which are compounded, made from out their shapes.<br/>
For soothly from no living Centaur is<br/>
That phantom gendered, since no breed of beast<br/>
Like him was ever; but, when images<br/>
Of horse and man by chance have come together,<br/>
They easily cohere, as aforesaid,<br/>
At once, through subtle nature and fabric thin.<br/>
In the same fashion others of this ilk<br/>
Created are. And when they're quickly borne<br/>
In their exceeding lightness, easily<br/>
(As earlier I showed) one subtle image,<br/>
Compounded, moves by its one blow the mind,<br/>
Itself so subtle and so strangely quick.<br/>
<br/>
That these things come to pass as I record,<br/>
From this thou easily canst understand:<br/>
So far as one is unto other like,<br/>
Seeing with mind as well as with the eyes<br/>
Must come to pass in fashion not unlike.<br/>
Well, now, since I have shown that I perceive<br/>
Haply a lion through those idol-films<br/>
Such as assail my eyes, 'tis thine to know<br/>
Also the mind is in like manner moved,<br/>
And sees, nor more nor less than eyes do see<br/>
(Except that it perceives more subtle films)<br/>
The lion and aught else through idol-films.<br/>
And when the sleep has overset our frame,<br/>
The mind's intelligence is now awake,<br/>
Still for no other reason, save that these—<br/>
The self-same films as when we are awake—<br/>
Assail our minds, to such degree indeed<br/>
That we do seem to see for sure the man<br/>
Whom, void of life, now death and earth have gained<br/>
Dominion over. And nature forces this<br/>
To come to pass because the body's senses<br/>
Are resting, thwarted through the members all,<br/>
Unable now to conquer false with true;<br/>
And memory lies prone and languishes<br/>
In slumber, nor protests that he, the man<br/>
Whom the mind feigns to see alive, long since<br/>
Hath been the gain of death and dissolution.<br/>
<br/>
And further, 'tis no marvel idols move<br/>
And toss their arms and other members round<br/>
In rhythmic time—and often in men's sleeps<br/>
It haps an image this is seen to do;<br/>
In sooth, when perishes the former image,<br/>
And other is gendered of another pose,<br/>
That former seemeth to have changed its gestures.<br/>
Of course the change must be conceived as speedy;<br/>
So great the swiftness and so great the store<br/>
Of idol-things, and (in an instant brief<br/>
As mind can mark) so great, again, the store<br/>
Of separate idol-parts to bring supplies.<br/>
<br/>
It happens also that there is supplied<br/>
Sometimes an image not of kind the same;<br/>
But what before was woman, now at hand<br/>
Is seen to stand there, altered into male;<br/>
Or other visage, other age succeeds;<br/>
But slumber and oblivion take care<br/>
That we shall feel no wonder at the thing.<br/>
<br/>
And much in these affairs demands inquiry,<br/>
And much, illumination—if we crave<br/>
With plainness to exhibit facts. And first,<br/>
Why doth the mind of one to whom the whim<br/>
To think has come behold forthwith that thing?<br/>
Or do the idols watch upon our will,<br/>
And doth an image unto us occur,<br/>
Directly we desire—if heart prefer<br/>
The sea, the land, or after all the sky?<br/>
Assemblies of the citizens, parades,<br/>
Banquets, and battles, these and all doth she,<br/>
Nature, create and furnish at our word?—<br/>
Maugre the fact that in same place and spot<br/>
Another's mind is meditating things<br/>
All far unlike. And what, again, of this:<br/>
When we in sleep behold the idols step,<br/>
In measure, forward, moving supple limbs,<br/>
Whilst forth they put each supple arm in turn<br/>
With speedy motion, and with eyeing heads<br/>
Repeat the movement, as the foot keeps time?<br/>
Forsooth, the idols they are steeped in art,<br/>
And wander to and fro well taught indeed,—<br/>
Thus to be able in the time of night<br/>
To make such games! Or will the truth be this:<br/>
Because in one least moment that we mark—<br/>
That is, the uttering of a single sound—<br/>
There lurk yet many moments, which the reason<br/>
Discovers to exist, therefore it comes<br/>
That, in a moment how so brief ye will,<br/>
The divers idols are hard by, and ready<br/>
Each in its place diverse? So great the swiftness,<br/>
So great, again, the store of idol-things,<br/>
And so, when perishes the former image,<br/>
And other is gendered of another pose,<br/>
The former seemeth to have changed its gestures.<br/>
And since they be so tenuous, mind can mark<br/>
Sharply alone the ones it strains to see;<br/>
And thus the rest do perish one and all,<br/>
Save those for which the mind prepares itself.<br/>
Further, it doth prepare itself indeed,<br/>
And hopes to see what follows after each—<br/>
Hence this result. For hast thou not observed<br/>
How eyes, essaying to perceive the fine,<br/>
Will strain in preparation, otherwise<br/>
Unable sharply to perceive at all?<br/>
Yet know thou canst that, even in objects plain,<br/>
If thou attendest not, 'tis just the same<br/>
As if 'twere all the time removed and far.<br/>
What marvel, then, that mind doth lose the rest,<br/>
Save those to which 'thas given up itself?<br/>
So 'tis that we conjecture from small signs<br/>
Things wide and weighty, and involve ourselves<br/>
In snarls of self-deceit.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> SOME VITAL FUNCTIONS </h2>
<p>In these affairs<br/>
We crave that thou wilt passionately flee<br/>
The one offence, and anxiously wilt shun<br/>
The error of presuming the clear lights<br/>
Of eyes created were that we might see;<br/>
Or thighs and knees, aprop upon the feet,<br/>
Thuswise can bended be, that we might step<br/>
With goodly strides ahead; or forearms joined<br/>
Unto the sturdy uppers, or serving hands<br/>
On either side were given, that we might do<br/>
Life's own demands. All such interpretation<br/>
Is aft-for-fore with inverse reasoning,<br/>
Since naught is born in body so that we<br/>
May use the same, but birth engenders use:<br/>
No seeing ere the lights of eyes were born,<br/>
No speaking ere the tongue created was;<br/>
But origin of tongue came long before<br/>
Discourse of words, and ears created were<br/>
Much earlier than any sound was heard;<br/>
And all the members, so meseems, were there<br/>
Before they got their use: and therefore, they<br/>
Could not be gendered for the sake of use.<br/>
But contrariwise, contending in the fight<br/>
With hand to hand, and rending of the joints,<br/>
And fouling of the limbs with gore, was there,<br/>
O long before the gleaming spears ere flew;<br/>
And nature prompted man to shun a wound,<br/>
Before the left arm by the aid of art<br/>
Opposed the shielding targe. And, verily,<br/>
Yielding the weary body to repose,<br/>
Far ancienter than cushions of soft beds,<br/>
And quenching thirst is earlier than cups.<br/>
These objects, therefore, which for use and life<br/>
Have been devised, can be conceived as found<br/>
For sake of using. But apart from such<br/>
Are all which first were born and afterwards<br/>
Gave knowledge of their own utility—<br/>
Chief in which sort we note the senses, limbs:<br/>
Wherefore, again, 'tis quite beyond thy power<br/>
To hold that these could thus have been create<br/>
For office of utility.<br/>
<br/>
Likewise,<br/>
'Tis nothing strange that all the breathing creatures<br/>
Seek, even by nature of their frame, their food.<br/>
Yes, since I've taught thee that from off the things<br/>
Stream and depart innumerable bodies<br/>
In modes innumerable too; but most<br/>
Must be the bodies streaming from the living—<br/>
Which bodies, vexed by motion evermore,<br/>
Are through the mouth exhaled innumerable,<br/>
When weary creatures pant, or through the sweat<br/>
Squeezed forth innumerable from deep within.<br/>
Thus body rarefies, so undermined<br/>
In all its nature, and pain attends its state.<br/>
And so the food is taken to underprop<br/>
The tottering joints, and by its interfusion<br/>
To re-create their powers, and there stop up<br/>
The longing, open-mouthed through limbs and veins,<br/>
For eating. And the moist no less departs<br/>
Into all regions that demand the moist;<br/>
And many heaped-up particles of hot,<br/>
Which cause such burnings in these bellies of ours,<br/>
The liquid on arriving dissipates<br/>
And quenches like a fire, that parching heat<br/>
No longer now can scorch the frame. And so,<br/>
Thou seest how panting thirst is washed away<br/>
From off our body, how the hunger-pang<br/>
It, too, appeased.<br/>
<br/>
Now, how it comes that we,<br/>
Whene'er we wish, can step with strides ahead,<br/>
And how 'tis given to move our limbs about,<br/>
And what device is wont to push ahead<br/>
This the big load of our corporeal frame,<br/>
I'll say to thee—do thou attend what's said.<br/>
I say that first some idol-films of walking<br/>
Into our mind do fall and smite the mind,<br/>
As said before. Thereafter will arises;<br/>
For no one starts to do a thing, before<br/>
The intellect previsions what it wills;<br/>
And what it there pre-visioneth depends<br/>
On what that image is. When, therefore, mind<br/>
Doth so bestir itself that it doth will<br/>
To go and step along, it strikes at once<br/>
That energy of soul that's sown about<br/>
In all the body through the limbs and frame—<br/>
And this is easy of performance, since<br/>
The soul is close conjoined with the mind.<br/>
Next, soul in turn strikes body, and by degrees<br/>
Thus the whole mass is pushed along and moved.<br/>
Then too the body rarefies, and air,<br/>
Forsooth as ever of such nimbleness,<br/>
Comes on and penetrates aboundingly<br/>
Through opened pores, and thus is sprinkled round<br/>
Unto all smallest places in our frame.<br/>
Thus then by these twain factors, severally,<br/>
Body is borne like ship with oars and wind.<br/>
Nor yet in these affairs is aught for wonder<br/>
That particles so fine can whirl around<br/>
So great a body and turn this weight of ours;<br/>
For wind, so tenuous with its subtle body,<br/>
Yet pushes, driving on the mighty ship<br/>
Of mighty bulk; one hand directs the same,<br/>
Whatever its momentum, and one helm<br/>
Whirls it around, whither ye please; and loads,<br/>
Many and huge, are moved and hoisted high<br/>
By enginery of pulley-blocks and wheels,<br/>
With but light strain.<br/>
<br/>
Now, by what modes this sleep<br/>
Pours through our members waters of repose<br/>
And frees the breast from cares of mind, I'll tell<br/>
In verses sweeter than they many are;<br/>
Even as the swan's slight note is better far<br/>
Than that dispersed clamour of the cranes<br/>
Among the southwind's aery clouds. Do thou<br/>
Give me sharp ears and a sagacious mind,—<br/>
That thou mayst not deny the things to be<br/>
Whereof I'm speaking, nor depart away<br/>
With bosom scorning these the spoken truths,<br/>
Thyself at fault unable to perceive.<br/>
Sleep chiefly comes when energy of soul<br/>
Hath now been scattered through the frame, and part<br/>
Expelled abroad and gone away, and part<br/>
Crammed back and settling deep within the frame—<br/>
Whereafter then our loosened members droop.<br/>
For doubt is none that by the work of soul<br/>
Exist in us this sense, and when by slumber<br/>
That sense is thwarted, we are bound to think<br/>
The soul confounded and expelled abroad—<br/>
Yet not entirely, else the frame would lie<br/>
Drenched in the everlasting cold of death.<br/>
In sooth, where no one part of soul remained<br/>
Lurking among the members, even as fire<br/>
Lurks buried under many ashes, whence<br/>
Could sense amain rekindled be in members,<br/>
As flame can rise anew from unseen fire?<br/>
<br/>
By what devices this strange state and new<br/>
May be occasioned, and by what the soul<br/>
Can be confounded and the frame grow faint,<br/>
I will untangle: see to it, thou, that I<br/>
Pour forth my words not unto empty winds.<br/>
In first place, body on its outer parts—<br/>
Since these are touched by neighbouring aery gusts—<br/>
Must there be thumped and strook by blows of air<br/>
Repeatedly. And therefore almost all<br/>
Are covered either with hides, or else with shells,<br/>
Or with the horny callus, or with bark.<br/>
Yet this same air lashes their inner parts,<br/>
When creatures draw a breath or blow it out.<br/>
Wherefore, since body thus is flogged alike<br/>
Upon the inside and the out, and blows<br/>
Come in upon us through the little pores<br/>
Even inward to our body's primal parts<br/>
And primal elements, there comes to pass<br/>
By slow degrees, along our members then,<br/>
A kind of overthrow; for then confounded<br/>
Are those arrangements of the primal germs<br/>
Of body and of mind. It comes to pass<br/>
That next a part of soul's expelled abroad,<br/>
A part retreateth in recesses hid,<br/>
A part, too, scattered all about the frame,<br/>
Cannot become united nor engage<br/>
In interchange of motion. Nature now<br/>
So hedges off approaches and the paths;<br/>
And thus the sense, its motions all deranged,<br/>
Retires down deep within; and since there's naught,<br/>
As 'twere, to prop the frame, the body weakens,<br/>
And all the members languish, and the arms<br/>
And eyelids fall, and, as ye lie abed,<br/>
Even there the houghs will sag and loose their powers.<br/>
Again, sleep follows after food, because<br/>
The food produces same result as air,<br/>
Whilst being scattered round through all the veins;<br/>
And much the heaviest is that slumber which,<br/>
Full or fatigued, thou takest; since 'tis then<br/>
That the most bodies disarrange themselves,<br/>
Bruised by labours hard. And in same wise,<br/>
This three-fold change: a forcing of the soul<br/>
Down deeper, more a casting-forth of it,<br/>
A moving more divided in its parts<br/>
And scattered more.<br/>
<br/>
And to whate'er pursuit<br/>
A man most clings absorbed, or what the affairs<br/>
On which we theretofore have tarried much,<br/>
And mind hath strained upon the more, we seem<br/>
In sleep not rarely to go at the same.<br/>
The lawyers seem to plead and cite decrees,<br/>
Commanders they to fight and go at frays,<br/>
Sailors to live in combat with the winds,<br/>
And we ourselves indeed to make this book,<br/>
And still to seek the nature of the world<br/>
And set it down, when once discovered, here<br/>
In these my country's leaves. Thus all pursuits,<br/>
All arts in general seem in sleeps to mock<br/>
And master the minds of men. And whosoever<br/>
Day after day for long to games have given<br/>
Attention undivided, still they keep<br/>
(As oft we note), even when they've ceased to grasp<br/>
Those games with their own senses, open paths<br/>
Within the mind wherethrough the idol-films<br/>
Of just those games can come. And thus it is<br/>
For many a day thereafter those appear<br/>
Floating before the eyes, that even awake<br/>
They think they view the dancers moving round<br/>
Their supple limbs, and catch with both the ears<br/>
The liquid song of harp and speaking chords,<br/>
And view the same assembly on the seats,<br/>
And manifold bright glories of the stage—<br/>
So great the influence of pursuit and zest,<br/>
And of the affairs wherein 'thas been the wont<br/>
Of men to be engaged-nor only men,<br/>
But soothly all the animals. Behold,<br/>
Thou'lt see the sturdy horses, though outstretched,<br/>
Yet sweating in their sleep, and panting ever,<br/>
And straining utmost strength, as if for prize,<br/>
As if, with barriers opened now...<br/>
And hounds of huntsmen oft in soft repose<br/>
Yet toss asudden all their legs about,<br/>
And growl and bark, and with their nostrils sniff<br/>
The winds again, again, as though indeed<br/>
They'd caught the scented foot-prints of wild beasts,<br/>
And, even when wakened, often they pursue<br/>
The phantom images of stags, as though<br/>
They did perceive them fleeing on before,<br/>
Until the illusion's shaken off and dogs<br/>
Come to themselves again. And fawning breed<br/>
Of house-bred whelps do feel the sudden urge<br/>
To shake their bodies and start from off the ground,<br/>
As if beholding stranger-visages.<br/>
And ever the fiercer be the stock, the more<br/>
In sleep the same is ever bound to rage.<br/>
But flee the divers tribes of birds and vex<br/>
With sudden wings by night the groves of gods,<br/>
When in their gentle slumbers they have dreamed<br/>
Of hawks in chase, aswooping on for fight.<br/>
Again, the minds of mortals which perform<br/>
With mighty motions mighty enterprises,<br/>
Often in sleep will do and dare the same<br/>
In manner like. Kings take the towns by storm,<br/>
Succumb to capture, battle on the field,<br/>
Raise a wild cry as if their throats were cut<br/>
Even then and there. And many wrestle on<br/>
And groan with pains, and fill all regions round<br/>
With mighty cries and wild, as if then gnawed<br/>
By fangs of panther or of lion fierce.<br/>
Many amid their slumbers talk about<br/>
Their mighty enterprises, and have often<br/>
Enough become the proof of their own crimes.<br/>
Many meet death; many, as if headlong<br/>
From lofty mountains tumbling down to earth<br/>
With all their frame, are frenzied in their fright;<br/>
And after sleep, as if still mad in mind,<br/>
They scarce come to, confounded as they are<br/>
By ferment of their frame. The thirsty man,<br/>
Likewise, he sits beside delightful spring<br/>
Or river and gulpeth down with gaping throat<br/>
Nigh the whole stream. And oft the innocent young,<br/>
By sleep o'ermastered, think they lift their dress<br/>
By pail or public jordan and then void<br/>
The water filtered down their frame entire<br/>
And drench the Babylonian coverlets,<br/>
Magnificently bright. Again, those males<br/>
Into the surging channels of whose years<br/>
Now first has passed the seed (engendered<br/>
Within their members by the ripened days)<br/>
Are in their sleep confronted from without<br/>
By idol-images of some fair form—<br/>
Tidings of glorious face and lovely bloom,<br/>
Which stir and goad the regions turgid now<br/>
With seed abundant; so that, as it were<br/>
With all the matter acted duly out,<br/>
They pour the billows of a potent stream<br/>
And stain their garment.<br/>
<br/>
And as said before,<br/>
That seed is roused in us when once ripe age<br/>
Has made our body strong...<br/>
As divers causes give to divers things<br/>
Impulse and irritation, so one force<br/>
In human kind rouses the human seed<br/>
To spurt from man. As soon as ever it issues,<br/>
Forced from its first abodes, it passes down<br/>
In the whole body through the limbs and frame,<br/>
Meeting in certain regions of our thews,<br/>
And stirs amain the genitals of man.<br/>
The goaded regions swell with seed, and then<br/>
Comes the delight to dart the same at what<br/>
The mad desire so yearns, and body seeks<br/>
That object, whence the mind by love is pierced.<br/>
For well-nigh each man falleth toward his wound,<br/>
And our blood spurts even toward the spot from whence<br/>
The stroke wherewith we are strook, and if indeed<br/>
The foe be close, the red jet reaches him.<br/>
Thus, one who gets a stroke from Venus' shafts—<br/>
Whether a boy with limbs effeminate<br/>
Assault him, or a woman darting love<br/>
From all her body—that one strains to get<br/>
Even to the thing whereby he's hit, and longs<br/>
To join with it and cast into its frame<br/>
The fluid drawn even from within its own.<br/>
For the mute craving doth presage delight.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> THE PASSION OF LOVE </h2>
<p>This craving 'tis that's Venus unto us:<br/>
From this, engender all the lures of love,<br/>
From this, O first hath into human hearts<br/>
Trickled that drop of joyance which ere long<br/>
Is by chill care succeeded. Since, indeed,<br/>
Though she thou lovest now be far away,<br/>
Yet idol-images of her are near<br/>
And the sweet name is floating in thy ear.<br/>
But it behooves to flee those images;<br/>
And scare afar whatever feeds thy love;<br/>
And turn elsewhere thy mind; and vent the sperm,<br/>
Within thee gathered, into sundry bodies,<br/>
Nor, with thy thoughts still busied with one love,<br/>
Keep it for one delight, and so store up<br/>
Care for thyself and pain inevitable.<br/>
For, lo, the ulcer just by nourishing<br/>
Grows to more life with deep inveteracy,<br/>
And day by day the fury swells aflame,<br/>
And the woe waxes heavier day by day—<br/>
Unless thou dost destroy even by new blows<br/>
The former wounds of love, and curest them<br/>
While yet they're fresh, by wandering freely round<br/>
After the freely-wandering Venus, or<br/>
Canst lead elsewhere the tumults of thy mind.<br/>
<br/>
Nor doth that man who keeps away from love<br/>
Yet lack the fruits of Venus; rather takes<br/>
Those pleasures which are free of penalties.<br/>
For the delights of Venus, verily,<br/>
Are more unmixed for mortals sane-of-soul<br/>
Than for those sick-at-heart with love-pining.<br/>
Yea, in the very moment of possessing,<br/>
Surges the heat of lovers to and fro,<br/>
Restive, uncertain; and they cannot fix<br/>
On what to first enjoy with eyes and hands.<br/>
The parts they sought for, those they squeeze so tight,<br/>
And pain the creature's body, close their teeth<br/>
Often against her lips, and smite with kiss<br/>
Mouth into mouth,—because this same delight<br/>
Is not unmixed; and underneath are stings<br/>
Which goad a man to hurt the very thing,<br/>
Whate'er it be, from whence arise for him<br/>
Those germs of madness. But with gentle touch<br/>
Venus subdues the pangs in midst of love,<br/>
And the admixture of a fondling joy<br/>
Doth curb the bites of passion. For they hope<br/>
That by the very body whence they caught<br/>
The heats of love their flames can be put out.<br/>
But nature protests 'tis all quite otherwise;<br/>
For this same love it is the one sole thing<br/>
Of which, the more we have, the fiercer burns<br/>
The breast with fell desire. For food and drink<br/>
Are taken within our members; and, since they<br/>
Can stop up certain parts, thus, easily<br/>
Desire of water is glutted and of bread.<br/>
But, lo, from human face and lovely bloom<br/>
Naught penetrates our frame to be enjoyed<br/>
Save flimsy idol-images and vain—<br/>
A sorry hope which oft the winds disperse.<br/>
As when the thirsty man in slumber seeks<br/>
To drink, and water ne'er is granted him<br/>
Wherewith to quench the heat within his members,<br/>
But after idols of the liquids strives<br/>
And toils in vain, and thirsts even whilst he gulps<br/>
In middle of the torrent, thus in love<br/>
Venus deludes with idol-images<br/>
The lovers. Nor they cannot sate their lust<br/>
By merely gazing on the bodies, nor<br/>
They cannot with their palms and fingers rub<br/>
Aught from each tender limb, the while they stray<br/>
Uncertain over all the body. Then,<br/>
At last, with members intertwined, when they<br/>
Enjoy the flower of their age, when now<br/>
Their bodies have sweet presage of keen joys,<br/>
And Venus is about to sow the fields<br/>
Of woman, greedily their frames they lock,<br/>
And mingle the slaver of their mouths, and breathe<br/>
Into each other, pressing teeth on mouths—<br/>
Yet to no purpose, since they're powerless<br/>
To rub off aught, or penetrate and pass<br/>
With body entire into body—for oft<br/>
They seem to strive and struggle thus to do;<br/>
So eagerly they cling in Venus' bonds,<br/>
Whilst melt away their members, overcome<br/>
By violence of delight. But when at last<br/>
Lust, gathered in the thews, hath spent itself,<br/>
There come a brief pause in the raging heat—<br/>
But then a madness just the same returns<br/>
And that old fury visits them again,<br/>
When once again they seek and crave to reach<br/>
They know not what, all powerless to find<br/>
The artifice to subjugate the bane.<br/>
In such uncertain state they waste away<br/>
With unseen wound.<br/>
<br/>
To which be added too,<br/>
They squander powers and with the travail wane;<br/>
Be added too, they spend their futile years<br/>
Under another's beck and call; their duties<br/>
Neglected languish and their honest name<br/>
Reeleth sick, sick; and meantime their estates<br/>
Are lost in Babylonian tapestries;<br/>
And unguents and dainty Sicyonian shoes<br/>
Laugh on her feet; and (as ye may be sure)<br/>
Big emeralds of green light are set in gold;<br/>
And rich sea-purple dress by constant wear<br/>
Grows shabby and all soaked with Venus' sweat;<br/>
And the well-earned ancestral property<br/>
Becometh head-bands, coifs, and many a time<br/>
The cloaks, or garments Alidensian<br/>
Or of the Cean isle. And banquets, set<br/>
With rarest cloth and viands, are prepared—<br/>
And games of chance, and many a drinking cup,<br/>
And unguents, crowns and garlands. All in vain,<br/>
Since from amid the well-spring of delights<br/>
Bubbles some drop of bitter to torment<br/>
Among the very flowers—when haply mind<br/>
Gnaws into self, now stricken with remorse<br/>
For slothful years and ruin in baudels,<br/>
Or else because she's left him all in doubt<br/>
By launching some sly word, which still like fire<br/>
Lives wildly, cleaving to his eager heart;<br/>
Or else because he thinks she darts her eyes<br/>
Too much about and gazes at another,—<br/>
And in her face sees traces of a laugh.<br/>
<br/>
These ills are found in prospering love and true;<br/>
But in crossed love and helpless there be such<br/>
As through shut eyelids thou canst still take in—<br/>
Uncounted ills; so that 'tis better far<br/>
To watch beforehand, in the way I've shown,<br/>
And guard against enticements. For to shun<br/>
A fall into the hunting-snares of love<br/>
Is not so hard, as to get out again,<br/>
When tangled in the very nets, and burst<br/>
The stoutly-knotted cords of Aphrodite.<br/>
Yet even when there enmeshed with tangled feet,<br/>
Still canst thou scape the danger-lest indeed<br/>
Thou standest in the way of thine own good,<br/>
And overlookest first all blemishes<br/>
Of mind and body of thy much preferred,<br/>
Desirable dame. For so men do,<br/>
Eyeless with passion, and assign to them<br/>
Graces not theirs in fact. And thus we see<br/>
Creatures in many a wise crooked and ugly<br/>
The prosperous sweethearts in a high esteem;<br/>
And lovers gird each other and advise<br/>
To placate Venus, since their friends are smit<br/>
With a base passion—miserable dupes<br/>
Who seldom mark their own worst bane of all.<br/>
The black-skinned girl is "tawny like the honey";<br/>
The filthy and the fetid's "negligee";<br/>
The cat-eyed she's "a little Pallas," she;<br/>
The sinewy and wizened's "a gazelle";<br/>
The pudgy and the pigmy is "piquant,<br/>
One of the Graces sure"; the big and bulky<br/>
O she's "an Admiration, imposante";<br/>
The stuttering and tongue-tied "sweetly lisps";<br/>
The mute girl's "modest"; and the garrulous,<br/>
The spiteful spit-fire, is "a sparkling wit";<br/>
And she who scarcely lives for scrawniness<br/>
Becomes "a slender darling"; "delicate"<br/>
Is she who's nearly dead of coughing-fit;<br/>
The pursy female with protuberant breasts<br/>
She is "like Ceres when the goddess gave<br/>
Young Bacchus suck"; the pug-nosed lady-love<br/>
"A Satyress, a feminine Silenus";<br/>
The blubber-lipped is "all one luscious kiss"—<br/>
A weary while it were to tell the whole.<br/>
But let her face possess what charm ye will,<br/>
Let Venus' glory rise from all her limbs,—<br/>
Forsooth there still are others; and forsooth<br/>
We lived before without her; and forsooth<br/>
She does the same things—and we know she does—<br/>
All, as the ugly creature, and she scents,<br/>
Yes she, her wretched self with vile perfumes;<br/>
Whom even her handmaids flee and giggle at<br/>
Behind her back. But he, the lover, in tears<br/>
Because shut out, covers her threshold o'er<br/>
Often with flowers and garlands, and anoints<br/>
Her haughty door-posts with the marjoram,<br/>
And prints, poor fellow, kisses on the doors—<br/>
Admitted at last, if haply but one whiff<br/>
Got to him on approaching, he would seek<br/>
Decent excuses to go out forthwith;<br/>
And his lament, long pondered, then would fall<br/>
Down at his heels; and there he'd damn himself<br/>
For his fatuity, observing how<br/>
He had assigned to that same lady more—<br/>
Than it is proper to concede to mortals.<br/>
And these our Venuses are 'ware of this.<br/>
Wherefore the more are they at pains to hide<br/>
All the-behind-the-scenes of life from those<br/>
Whom they desire to keep in bonds of love—<br/>
In vain, since ne'ertheless thou canst by thought<br/>
Drag all the matter forth into the light<br/>
And well search out the cause of all these smiles;<br/>
And if of graceful mind she be and kind,<br/>
Do thou, in thy turn, overlook the same,<br/>
And thus allow for poor mortality.<br/>
Nor sighs the woman always with feigned love,<br/>
Who links her body round man's body locked<br/>
And holds him fast, making his kisses wet<br/>
With lips sucked into lips; for oft she acts<br/>
Even from desire, and, seeking mutual joys,<br/>
Incites him there to run love's race-course through.<br/>
Nor otherwise can cattle, birds, wild beasts,<br/>
And sheep and mares submit unto the males,<br/>
Except that their own nature is in heat,<br/>
And burns abounding and with gladness takes<br/>
Once more the Venus of the mounting males.<br/>
And seest thou not how those whom mutual pleasure<br/>
Hath bound are tortured in their common bonds?<br/>
How often in the cross-roads dogs that pant<br/>
To get apart strain eagerly asunder<br/>
With utmost might?—When all the while they're fast<br/>
In the stout links of Venus. But they'd ne'er<br/>
So pull, except they knew those mutual joys—<br/>
So powerful to cast them unto snares<br/>
And hold them bound. Wherefore again, again,<br/>
Even as I say, there is a joint delight.<br/>
<br/>
And when perchance, in mingling seed with his,<br/>
The female hath o'erpowered the force of male<br/>
And by a sudden fling hath seized it fast,<br/>
Then are the offspring, more from mothers' seed,<br/>
More like their mothers; as, from fathers' seed,<br/>
They're like to fathers. But whom seest to be<br/>
Partakers of each shape, one equal blend<br/>
Of parents' features, these are generate<br/>
From fathers' body and from mothers' blood,<br/>
When mutual and harmonious heat hath dashed<br/>
Together seeds, aroused along their frames<br/>
By Venus' goads, and neither of the twain<br/>
Mastereth or is mastered. Happens too<br/>
That sometimes offspring can to being come<br/>
In likeness of their grandsires, and bring back<br/>
Often the shapes of grandsires' sires, because<br/>
Their parents in their bodies oft retain<br/>
Concealed many primal germs, commixed<br/>
In many modes, which, starting with the stock,<br/>
Sire handeth down to son, himself a sire;<br/>
Whence Venus by a variable chance<br/>
Engenders shapes, and diversely brings back<br/>
Ancestral features, voices too, and hair.<br/>
A female generation rises forth<br/>
From seed paternal, and from mother's body<br/>
Exist created males: since sex proceeds<br/>
No more from singleness of seed than faces<br/>
Or bodies or limbs of ours: for every birth<br/>
Is from a twofold seed; and what's created<br/>
Hath, of that parent which it is more like,<br/>
More than its equal share; as thou canst mark,—<br/>
Whether the breed be male or female stock.<br/>
<br/>
Nor do the powers divine grudge any man<br/>
The fruits of his seed-sowing, so that never<br/>
He be called "father" by sweet children his,<br/>
And end his days in sterile love forever.<br/>
What many men suppose; and gloomily<br/>
They sprinkle the altars with abundant blood,<br/>
And make the high platforms odorous with burnt gifts,<br/>
To render big by plenteous seed their wives—<br/>
And plague in vain godheads and sacred lots.<br/>
For sterile are these men by seed too thick,<br/>
Or else by far too watery and thin.<br/>
Because the thin is powerless to cleave<br/>
Fast to the proper places, straightaway<br/>
It trickles from them, and, returned again,<br/>
Retires abortively. And then since seed<br/>
More gross and solid than will suit is spent<br/>
By some men, either it flies not forth amain<br/>
With spurt prolonged enough, or else it fails<br/>
To enter suitably the proper places,<br/>
Or, having entered, the seed is weakly mixed<br/>
With seed of the woman: harmonies of Venus<br/>
Are seen to matter vastly here; and some<br/>
Impregnate some more readily, and from some<br/>
Some women conceive more readily and become<br/>
Pregnant. And many women, sterile before<br/>
In several marriage-beds, have yet thereafter<br/>
Obtained the mates from whom they could conceive<br/>
The baby-boys, and with sweet progeny<br/>
Grow rich. And even for husbands (whose own wives,<br/>
Although of fertile wombs, have borne for them<br/>
No babies in the house) are also found<br/>
Concordant natures so that they at last<br/>
Can bulwark their old age with goodly sons.<br/>
A matter of great moment 'tis in truth,<br/>
That seeds may mingle readily with seeds<br/>
Suited for procreation, and that thick<br/>
Should mix with fluid seeds, with thick the fluid.<br/>
And in this business 'tis of some import<br/>
Upon what diet life is nourished:<br/>
For some foods thicken seeds within our members,<br/>
And others thin them out and waste away.<br/>
And in what modes the fond delight itself<br/>
Is carried on—this too importeth vastly.<br/>
For commonly 'tis thought that wives conceive<br/>
More readily in manner of wild-beasts,<br/>
After the custom of the four-foot breeds,<br/>
Because so postured, with the breasts beneath<br/>
And buttocks then upreared, the seeds can take<br/>
Their proper places. Nor is need the least<br/>
For wives to use the motions of blandishment;<br/>
For thus the woman hinders and resists<br/>
Her own conception, if too joyously<br/>
Herself she treats the Venus of the man<br/>
With haunches heaving, and with all her bosom<br/>
Now yielding like the billows of the sea—<br/>
Aye, from the ploughshare's even course and track<br/>
She throws the furrow, and from proper places<br/>
Deflects the spurt of seed. And courtesans<br/>
Are thuswise wont to move for their own ends,<br/>
To keep from pregnancy and lying in,<br/>
And all the while to render Venus more<br/>
A pleasure for the men—the which meseems<br/>
Our wives have never need of.<br/>
<br/>
Sometimes too<br/>
It happens—and through no divinity<br/>
Nor arrows of Venus—that a sorry chit<br/>
Of scanty grace will be beloved by man;<br/>
For sometimes she herself by very deeds,<br/>
By her complying ways, and tidy habits,<br/>
Will easily accustom thee to pass<br/>
With her thy life-time—and, moreover, lo,<br/>
Long habitude can gender human love,<br/>
Even as an object smitten o'er and o'er<br/>
By blows, however lightly, yet at last<br/>
Is overcome and wavers. Seest thou not,<br/>
Besides, how drops of water falling down<br/>
Against the stones at last bore through the stones?<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> BOOK V </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> PROEM </h2>
<p>O WHO can build with puissant breast a song<br/>
Worthy the majesty of these great finds?<br/>
Or who in words so strong that he can frame<br/>
The fit laudations for deserts of him<br/>
Who left us heritors of such vast prizes,<br/>
By his own breast discovered and sought out?—<br/>
There shall be none, methinks, of mortal stock.<br/>
For if must needs be named for him the name<br/>
Demanded by the now known majesty<br/>
Of these high matters, then a god was he,—<br/>
Hear me, illustrious Memmius—a god;<br/>
Who first and chief found out that plan of life<br/>
Which now is called philosophy, and who<br/>
By cunning craft, out of such mighty waves,<br/>
Out of such mighty darkness, moored life<br/>
In havens so serene, in light so clear.<br/>
Compare those old discoveries divine<br/>
Of others: lo, according to the tale,<br/>
Ceres established for mortality<br/>
The grain, and Bacchus juice of vine-born grape,<br/>
Though life might yet without these things abide,<br/>
Even as report saith now some peoples live.<br/>
But man's well-being was impossible<br/>
Without a breast all free. Wherefore the more<br/>
That man doth justly seem to us a god,<br/>
From whom sweet solaces of life, afar<br/>
Distributed o'er populous domains,<br/>
Now soothe the minds of men. But if thou thinkest<br/>
Labours of Hercules excel the same,<br/>
Much farther from true reasoning thou farest.<br/>
For what could hurt us now that mighty maw<br/>
Of Nemeaean Lion, or what the Boar<br/>
Who bristled in Arcadia? Or, again,<br/>
O what could Cretan Bull, or Hydra, pest<br/>
Of Lerna, fenced with vipers venomous?<br/>
Or what the triple-breasted power of her<br/>
The three-fold Geryon...<br/>
The sojourners in the Stymphalian fens<br/>
So dreadfully offend us, or the Steeds<br/>
Of Thracian Diomedes breathing fire<br/>
From out their nostrils off along the zones<br/>
Bistonian and Ismarian? And the Snake,<br/>
The dread fierce gazer, guardian of the golden<br/>
And gleaming apples of the Hesperides,<br/>
Coiled round the tree-trunk with tremendous bulk,<br/>
O what, again, could he inflict on us<br/>
Along the Atlantic shore and wastes of sea?—<br/>
Where neither one of us approacheth nigh<br/>
Nor no barbarian ventures. And the rest<br/>
Of all those monsters slain, even if alive,<br/>
Unconquered still, what injury could they do?<br/>
None, as I guess. For so the glutted earth<br/>
Swarms even now with savage beasts, even now<br/>
Is filled with anxious terrors through the woods<br/>
And mighty mountains and the forest deeps—<br/>
Quarters 'tis ours in general to avoid.<br/>
But lest the breast be purged, what conflicts then,<br/>
What perils, must bosom, in our own despite!<br/>
O then how great and keen the cares of lust<br/>
That split the man distraught! How great the fears!<br/>
And lo, the pride, grim greed, and wantonness—<br/>
How great the slaughters in their train! and lo,<br/>
Debaucheries and every breed of sloth!<br/>
Therefore that man who subjugated these,<br/>
And from the mind expelled, by words indeed,<br/>
Not arms, O shall it not be seemly him<br/>
To dignify by ranking with the gods?—<br/>
And all the more since he was wont to give,<br/>
Concerning the immortal gods themselves,<br/>
Many pronouncements with a tongue divine,<br/>
And to unfold by his pronouncements all<br/>
The nature of the world.<br/></p>
<p>ARGUMENT OF THE BOOK AND NEW PROEM<br/>
AGAINST A TELEOLOGICAL CONCEPT<br/></p>
<p>And walking now<br/>
In his own footprints, I do follow through<br/>
His reasonings, and with pronouncements teach<br/>
The covenant whereby all things are framed,<br/>
How under that covenant they must abide<br/>
Nor ever prevail to abrogate the aeons'<br/>
Inexorable decrees,—how (as we've found),<br/>
In class of mortal objects, o'er all else,<br/>
The mind exists of earth-born frame create<br/>
And impotent unscathed to abide<br/>
Across the mighty aeons, and how come<br/>
In sleep those idol-apparitions,<br/>
That so befool intelligence when we<br/>
Do seem to view a man whom life has left.<br/>
Thus far we've gone; the order of my plan<br/>
Hath brought me now unto the point where I<br/>
Must make report how, too, the universe<br/>
Consists of mortal body, born in time,<br/>
And in what modes that congregated stuff<br/>
Established itself as earth and sky,<br/>
Ocean, and stars, and sun, and ball of moon;<br/>
And then what living creatures rose from out<br/>
The old telluric places, and what ones<br/>
Were never born at all; and in what mode<br/>
The human race began to name its things<br/>
And use the varied speech from man to man;<br/>
And in what modes hath bosomed in their breasts<br/>
That awe of gods, which halloweth in all lands<br/>
Fanes, altars, groves, lakes, idols of the gods.<br/>
Also I shall untangle by what power<br/>
The steersman nature guides the sun's courses,<br/>
And the meanderings of the moon, lest we,<br/>
Percase, should fancy that of own free will<br/>
They circle their perennial courses round,<br/>
Timing their motions for increase of crops<br/>
And living creatures, or lest we should think<br/>
They roll along by any plan of gods.<br/>
For even those men who have learned full well<br/>
That godheads lead a long life free of care,<br/>
If yet meanwhile they wonder by what plan<br/>
Things can go on (and chiefly yon high things<br/>
Observed o'erhead on the ethereal coasts),<br/>
Again are hurried back unto the fears<br/>
Of old religion and adopt again<br/>
Harsh masters, deemed almighty,—wretched men,<br/>
Unwitting what can be and what cannot,<br/>
And by what law to each its scope prescribed,<br/>
Its boundary stone that clings so deep in Time.<br/>
<br/>
But for the rest,—lest we delay thee here<br/>
Longer by empty promises—behold,<br/>
Before all else, the seas, the lands, the sky:<br/>
O Memmius, their threefold nature, lo,<br/>
Their bodies three, three aspects so unlike,<br/>
Three frames so vast, a single day shall give<br/>
Unto annihilation! Then shall crash<br/>
That massive form and fabric of the world<br/>
Sustained so many aeons! Nor do I<br/>
Fail to perceive how strange and marvellous<br/>
This fact must strike the intellect of man,—<br/>
Annihilation of the sky and earth<br/>
That is to be,—and with what toil of words<br/>
'Tis mine to prove the same; as happens oft<br/>
When once ye offer to man's listening ears<br/>
Something before unheard of, but may not<br/>
Subject it to the view of eyes for him<br/>
Nor put it into hand—the sight and touch,<br/>
Whereby the opened highways of belief<br/>
Lead most directly into human breast<br/>
And regions of intelligence. But yet<br/>
I will speak out. The fact itself, perchance,<br/>
Will force belief in these my words, and thou<br/>
Mayst see, in little time, tremendously<br/>
With risen commotions of the lands all things<br/>
Quaking to pieces—which afar from us<br/>
May she, the steersman Nature, guide: and may<br/>
Reason, O rather than the fact itself,<br/>
Persuade us that all things can be o'erthrown<br/>
And sink with awful-sounding breakage down!<br/>
<br/>
But ere on this I take a step to utter<br/>
Oracles holier and soundlier based<br/>
Than ever the Pythian pronounced for men<br/>
From out the tripod and the Delphian laurel,<br/>
I will unfold for thee with learned words<br/>
Many a consolation, lest perchance,<br/>
Still bridled by religion, thou suppose<br/>
Lands, sun, and sky, sea, constellations, moon,<br/>
Must dure forever, as of frame divine—<br/>
And so conclude that it is just that those,<br/>
(After the manner of the Giants), should all<br/>
Pay the huge penalties for monstrous crime,<br/>
Who by their reasonings do overshake<br/>
The ramparts of the universe and wish<br/>
There to put out the splendid sun of heaven,<br/>
Branding with mortal talk immortal things—<br/>
Though these same things are even so far removed<br/>
From any touch of deity and seem<br/>
So far unworthy of numbering with the gods,<br/>
That well they may be thought to furnish rather<br/>
A goodly instance of the sort of things<br/>
That lack the living motion, living sense.<br/>
For sure 'tis quite beside the mark to think<br/>
That judgment and the nature of the mind<br/>
In any kind of body can exist—<br/>
Just as in ether can't exist a tree,<br/>
Nor clouds in the salt sea, nor in the fields<br/>
Can fishes live, nor blood in timber be,<br/>
Nor sap in boulders: fixed and arranged<br/>
Where everything may grow and have its place.<br/>
Thus nature of mind cannot arise alone<br/>
Without the body, nor have its being far<br/>
From thews and blood. Yet if 'twere possible?—<br/>
Much rather might this very power of mind<br/>
Be in the head, the shoulders, or the heels,<br/>
And, born in any part soever, yet<br/>
In the same man, in the same vessel abide<br/>
But since within this body even of ours<br/>
Stands fixed and appears arranged sure<br/>
Where soul and mind can each exist and grow,<br/>
Deny we must the more that they can dure<br/>
Outside the body and the breathing form<br/>
In rotting clods of earth, in the sun's fire,<br/>
In water, or in ether's skiey coasts.<br/>
Therefore these things no whit are furnished<br/>
With sense divine, since never can they be<br/>
With life-force quickened.<br/>
<br/>
Likewise, thou canst ne'er<br/>
Believe the sacred seats of gods are here<br/>
In any regions of this mundane world;<br/>
Indeed, the nature of the gods, so subtle,<br/>
So far removed from these our senses, scarce<br/>
Is seen even by intelligence of mind.<br/>
And since they've ever eluded touch and thrust<br/>
Of human hands, they cannot reach to grasp<br/>
Aught tangible to us. For what may not<br/>
Itself be touched in turn can never touch.<br/>
Wherefore, besides, also their seats must be<br/>
Unlike these seats of ours,—even subtle too,<br/>
As meet for subtle essence—as I'll prove<br/>
Hereafter unto thee with large discourse.<br/>
Further, to say that for the sake of men<br/>
They willed to prepare this world's magnificence,<br/>
And that 'tis therefore duty and behoof<br/>
To praise the work of gods as worthy praise,<br/>
And that 'tis sacrilege for men to shake<br/>
Ever by any force from out their seats<br/>
What hath been stablished by the Forethought old<br/>
To everlasting for races of mankind,<br/>
And that 'tis sacrilege to assault by words<br/>
And overtopple all from base to beam,—<br/>
Memmius, such notions to concoct and pile,<br/>
Is verily—to dote. Our gratefulness,<br/>
O what emoluments could it confer<br/>
Upon Immortals and upon the Blessed<br/>
That they should take a step to manage aught<br/>
For sake of us? Or what new factor could,<br/>
After so long a time, inveigle them—<br/>
The hitherto reposeful—to desire<br/>
To change their former life? For rather he<br/>
Whom old things chafe seems likely to rejoice<br/>
At new; but one that in fore-passed time<br/>
Hath chanced upon no ill, through goodly years,<br/>
O what could ever enkindle in such an one<br/>
Passion for strange experiment? Or what<br/>
The evil for us, if we had ne'er been born?—<br/>
As though, forsooth, in darkling realms and woe<br/>
Our life were lying till should dawn at last<br/>
The day-spring of creation! Whosoever<br/>
Hath been begotten wills perforce to stay<br/>
In life, so long as fond delight detains;<br/>
But whoso ne'er hath tasted love of life,<br/>
And ne'er was in the count of living things,<br/>
What hurts it him that he was never born?<br/>
Whence, further, first was planted in the gods<br/>
The archetype for gendering the world<br/>
And the fore-notion of what man is like,<br/>
So that they knew and pre-conceived with mind<br/>
Just what they wished to make? Or how were known<br/>
Ever the energies of primal germs,<br/>
And what those germs, by interchange of place,<br/>
Could thus produce, if nature's self had not<br/>
Given example for creating all?<br/>
For in such wise primordials of things,<br/>
Many in many modes, astir by blows<br/>
From immemorial aeons, in motion too<br/>
By their own weights, have evermore been wont<br/>
To be so borne along and in all modes<br/>
To meet together and to try all sorts<br/>
Which, by combining one with other, they<br/>
Are powerful to create, that thus it is<br/>
No marvel now, if they have also fallen<br/>
Into arrangements such, and if they've passed<br/>
Into vibrations such, as those whereby<br/>
This sum of things is carried on to-day<br/>
By fixed renewal. But knew I never what<br/>
The seeds primordial were, yet would I dare<br/>
This to affirm, even from deep judgments based<br/>
Upon the ways and conduct of the skies—<br/>
This to maintain by many a fact besides—<br/>
That in no wise the nature of all things<br/>
For us was fashioned by a power divine—<br/>
So great the faults it stands encumbered with.<br/>
First, mark all regions which are overarched<br/>
By the prodigious reaches of the sky:<br/>
One yawning part thereof the mountain-chains<br/>
And forests of the beasts do have and hold;<br/>
And cliffs, and desert fens, and wastes of sea<br/>
(Which sunder afar the beaches of the lands)<br/>
Possess it merely; and, again, thereof<br/>
Well-nigh two-thirds intolerable heat<br/>
And a perpetual fall of frost doth rob<br/>
From mortal kind. And what is left to till,<br/>
Even that the force of nature would o'errun<br/>
With brambles, did not human force oppose,—<br/>
Long wont for livelihood to groan and sweat<br/>
Over the two-pronged mattock and to cleave<br/>
The soil in twain by pressing on the plough.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Unless, by the ploughshare turning the fruitful clods<br/>
And kneading the mould, we quicken into birth,<br/>
[The crops] spontaneously could not come up<br/>
Into the free bright air. Even then sometimes,<br/>
When things acquired by the sternest toil<br/>
Are now in leaf, are now in blossom all,<br/>
Either the skiey sun with baneful heats<br/>
Parches, or sudden rains or chilling rime<br/>
Destroys, or flaws of winds with furious whirl<br/>
Torment and twist. Beside these matters, why<br/>
Doth nature feed and foster on land and sea<br/>
The dreadful breed of savage beasts, the foes<br/>
Of the human clan? Why do the seasons bring<br/>
Distempers with them? Wherefore stalks at large<br/>
Death, so untimely? Then, again, the babe,<br/>
Like to the castaway of the raging surf,<br/>
Lies naked on the ground, speechless, in want<br/>
Of every help for life, when nature first<br/>
Hath poured him forth upon the shores of light<br/>
With birth-pangs from within the mother's womb,<br/>
And with a plaintive wail he fills the place,—<br/>
As well befitting one for whom remains<br/>
In life a journey through so many ills.<br/>
But all the flocks and herds and all wild beasts<br/>
Come forth and grow, nor need the little rattles,<br/>
Nor must be treated to the humouring nurse's<br/>
Dear, broken chatter; nor seek they divers clothes<br/>
To suit the changing skies; nor need, in fine,<br/>
Nor arms, nor lofty ramparts, wherewithal<br/>
Their own to guard—because the earth herself<br/>
And nature, artificer of the world, bring forth<br/>
Aboundingly all things for all.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE WORLD IS NOT ETERNAL </h2>
<p>And first,<br/>
Since body of earth and water, air's light breath,<br/>
And fiery exhalations (of which four<br/>
This sum of things is seen to be compact)<br/>
So all have birth and perishable frame,<br/>
Thus the whole nature of the world itself<br/>
Must be conceived as perishable too.<br/>
For, verily, those things of which we see<br/>
The parts and members to have birth in time<br/>
And perishable shapes, those same we mark<br/>
To be invariably born in time<br/>
And born to die. And therefore when I see<br/>
The mightiest members and the parts of this<br/>
Our world consumed and begot again,<br/>
'Tis mine to know that also sky above<br/>
And earth beneath began of old in time<br/>
And shall in time go under to disaster.<br/>
<br/>
And lest in these affairs thou deemest me<br/>
To have seized upon this point by sleight to serve<br/>
My own caprice—because I have assumed<br/>
That earth and fire are mortal things indeed,<br/>
And have not doubted water and the air<br/>
Both perish too and have affirmed the same<br/>
To be again begotten and wax big—<br/>
Mark well the argument: in first place, lo,<br/>
Some certain parts of earth, grievously parched<br/>
By unremitting suns, and trampled on<br/>
By a vast throng of feet, exhale abroad<br/>
A powdery haze and flying clouds of dust,<br/>
Which the stout winds disperse in the whole air.<br/>
A part, moreover, of her sod and soil<br/>
Is summoned to inundation by the rains;<br/>
And rivers graze and gouge the banks away.<br/>
Besides, whatever takes a part its own<br/>
In fostering and increasing [aught]...<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Is rendered back; and since, beyond a doubt,<br/>
Earth, the all-mother, is beheld to be<br/>
Likewise the common sepulchre of things,<br/>
Therefore thou seest her minished of her plenty,<br/>
And then again augmented with new growth.<br/>
<br/>
And for the rest, that sea, and streams, and springs<br/>
Forever with new waters overflow,<br/>
And that perennially the fluids well,<br/>
Needeth no words—the mighty flux itself<br/>
Of multitudinous waters round about<br/>
Declareth this. But whatso water first<br/>
Streams up is ever straightway carried off,<br/>
And thus it comes to pass that all in all<br/>
There is no overflow; in part because<br/>
The burly winds (that over-sweep amain)<br/>
And skiey sun (that with his rays dissolves)<br/>
Do minish the level seas; in part because<br/>
The water is diffused underground<br/>
Through all the lands. The brine is filtered off,<br/>
And then the liquid stuff seeps back again<br/>
And all regathers at the river-heads,<br/>
Whence in fresh-water currents on it flows<br/>
Over the lands, adown the channels which<br/>
Were cleft erstwhile and erstwhile bore along<br/>
The liquid-footed floods.<br/>
<br/>
Now, then, of air<br/>
I'll speak, which hour by hour in all its body<br/>
Is changed innumerably. For whatso'er<br/>
Streams up in dust or vapour off of things,<br/>
The same is all and always borne along<br/>
Into the mighty ocean of the air;<br/>
And did not air in turn restore to things<br/>
Bodies, and thus recruit them as they stream,<br/>
All things by this time had resolved been<br/>
And changed into air. Therefore it never<br/>
Ceases to be engendered off of things<br/>
And to return to things, since verily<br/>
In constant flux do all things stream.<br/>
<br/>
Likewise,<br/>
The abounding well-spring of the liquid light,<br/>
The ethereal sun, doth flood the heaven o'er<br/>
With constant flux of radiance ever new,<br/>
And with fresh light supplies the place of light,<br/>
Upon the instant. For whatever effulgence<br/>
Hath first streamed off, no matter where it falls,<br/>
Is lost unto the sun. And this 'tis thine<br/>
To know from these examples: soon as clouds<br/>
Have first begun to under-pass the sun,<br/>
And, as it were, to rend the rays of light<br/>
In twain, at once the lower part of them<br/>
Is lost entire, and earth is overcast<br/>
Where'er the thunderheads are rolled along—<br/>
So know thou mayst that things forever need<br/>
A fresh replenishment of gleam and glow,<br/>
And each effulgence, foremost flashed forth,<br/>
Perisheth one by one. Nor otherwise<br/>
Can things be seen in sunlight, lest alway<br/>
The fountain-head of light supply new light.<br/>
Indeed your earthly beacons of the night,<br/>
The hanging lampions and the torches, bright<br/>
With darting gleams and dense with livid soot,<br/>
Do hurry in like manner to supply<br/>
With ministering heat new light amain;<br/>
Are all alive to quiver with their fires,—<br/>
Are so alive, that thus the light ne'er leaves<br/>
The spots it shines on, as if rent in twain:<br/>
So speedily is its destruction veiled<br/>
By the swift birth of flame from all the fires.<br/>
Thus, then, we must suppose that sun and moon<br/>
And stars dart forth their light from under-births<br/>
Ever and ever new, and whatso flames<br/>
First rise do perish always one by one—<br/>
Lest, haply, thou shouldst think they each endure<br/>
Inviolable.<br/>
<br/>
Again, perceivest not<br/>
How stones are also conquered by Time?—<br/>
Not how the lofty towers ruin down,<br/>
And boulders crumble?—Not how shrines of gods<br/>
And idols crack outworn?—Nor how indeed<br/>
The holy Influence hath yet no power<br/>
There to postpone the Terminals of Fate,<br/>
Or headway make 'gainst Nature's fixed decrees?<br/>
Again, behold we not the monuments<br/>
Of heroes, now in ruins, asking us,<br/>
In their turn likewise, if we don't believe<br/>
They also age with eld? Behold we not<br/>
The rended basalt ruining amain<br/>
Down from the lofty mountains, powerless<br/>
To dure and dree the mighty forces there<br/>
Of finite time?—for they would never fall<br/>
Rended asudden, if from infinite Past<br/>
They had prevailed against all engin'ries<br/>
Of the assaulting aeons, with no crash.<br/>
<br/>
Again, now look at This, which round, above,<br/>
Contains the whole earth in its one embrace:<br/>
If from itself it procreates all things—<br/>
As some men tell—and takes them to itself<br/>
When once destroyed, entirely must it be<br/>
Of mortal birth and body; for whate'er<br/>
From out itself giveth to other things<br/>
Increase and food, the same perforce must be<br/>
Minished, and then recruited when it takes<br/>
Things back into itself.<br/>
<br/>
Besides all this,<br/>
If there had been no origin-in-birth<br/>
Of lands and sky, and they had ever been<br/>
The everlasting, why, ere Theban war<br/>
And obsequies of Troy, have other bards<br/>
Not also chanted other high affairs?<br/>
Whither have sunk so oft so many deeds<br/>
Of heroes? Why do those deeds live no more,<br/>
Ingrafted in eternal monuments<br/>
Of glory? Verily, I guess, because<br/>
The Sum is new, and of a recent date<br/>
The nature of our universe, and had<br/>
Not long ago its own exordium.<br/>
Wherefore, even now some arts are being still<br/>
Refined, still increased: now unto ships<br/>
Is being added many a new device;<br/>
And but the other day musician-folk<br/>
Gave birth to melic sounds of organing;<br/>
And, then, this nature, this account of things<br/>
Hath been discovered latterly, and I<br/>
Myself have been discovered only now,<br/>
As first among the first, able to turn<br/>
The same into ancestral Roman speech.<br/>
Yet if, percase, thou deemest that ere this<br/>
Existed all things even the same, but that<br/>
Perished the cycles of the human race<br/>
In fiery exhalations, or cities fell<br/>
By some tremendous quaking of the world,<br/>
Or rivers in fury, after constant rains,<br/>
Had plunged forth across the lands of earth<br/>
And whelmed the towns—then, all the more must thou<br/>
Confess, defeated by the argument,<br/>
That there shall be annihilation too<br/>
Of lands and sky. For at a time when things<br/>
Were being taxed by maladies so great,<br/>
And so great perils, if some cause more fell<br/>
Had then assailed them, far and wide they would<br/>
Have gone to disaster and supreme collapse.<br/>
And by no other reasoning are we<br/>
Seen to be mortal, save that all of us<br/>
Sicken in turn with those same maladies<br/>
With which have sickened in the past those men<br/>
Whom nature hath removed from life.<br/>
<br/></p>
<p>gain,<br/>
Whatever abides eternal must indeed<br/>
Either repel all strokes, because 'tis made<br/>
Of solid body, and permit no entrance<br/>
Of aught with power to sunder from within<br/>
The parts compact—as are those seeds of stuff<br/>
Whose nature we've exhibited before;<br/>
Or else be able to endure through time<br/>
For this: because they are from blows exempt,<br/>
As is the void, the which abides untouched,<br/>
Unsmit by any stroke; or else because<br/>
There is no room around, whereto things can,<br/>
As 'twere, depart in dissolution all,—<br/>
Even as the sum of sums eternal is,<br/>
Without or place beyond whereto things may<br/>
Asunder fly, or bodies which can smite,<br/>
And thus dissolve them by the blows of might.<br/>
But not of solid body, as I've shown,<br/>
Exists the nature of the world, because<br/>
In things is intermingled there a void;<br/>
Nor is the world yet as the void, nor are,<br/>
Moreover, bodies lacking which, percase,<br/>
Rising from out the infinite, can fell<br/>
With fury-whirlwinds all this sum of things,<br/>
Or bring upon them other cataclysm<br/>
Of peril strange; and yonder, too, abides<br/>
The infinite space and the profound abyss—<br/>
Whereinto, lo, the ramparts of the world<br/>
Can yet be shivered. Or some other power<br/>
Can pound upon them till they perish all.<br/>
Thus is the door of doom, O nowise barred<br/>
Against the sky, against the sun and earth<br/>
And deep-sea waters, but wide open stands<br/>
And gloats upon them, monstrous and agape.<br/>
Wherefore, again, 'tis needful to confess<br/>
That these same things are born in time; for things<br/>
Which are of mortal body could indeed<br/>
Never from infinite past until to-day<br/>
Have spurned the multitudinous assaults<br/>
Of the immeasurable aeons old.<br/>
<br/>
Again, since battle so fiercely one with other<br/>
The four most mighty members the world,<br/>
Aroused in an all unholy war,<br/>
Seest not that there may be for them an end<br/>
Of the long strife?—Or when the skiey sun<br/>
And all the heat have won dominion o'er<br/>
The sucked-up waters all?—And this they try<br/>
Still to accomplish, though as yet they fail,—<br/>
For so aboundingly the streams supply<br/>
New store of waters that 'tis rather they<br/>
Who menace the world with inundations vast<br/>
From forth the unplumbed chasms of the sea.<br/>
But vain—since winds (that over-sweep amain)<br/>
And skiey sun (that with his rays dissolves)<br/>
Do minish the level seas and trust their power<br/>
To dry up all, before the waters can<br/>
Arrive at the end of their endeavouring.<br/>
Breathing such vasty warfare, they contend<br/>
In balanced strife the one with other still<br/>
Concerning mighty issues,—though indeed<br/>
The fire was once the more victorious,<br/>
And once—as goes the tale—the water won<br/>
A kingdom in the fields. For fire o'ermastered<br/>
And licked up many things and burnt away,<br/>
What time the impetuous horses of the Sun<br/>
Snatched Phaethon headlong from his skiey road<br/>
Down the whole ether and over all the lands.<br/>
But the omnipotent Father in keen wrath<br/>
Then with the sudden smite of thunderbolt<br/>
Did hurl the mighty-minded hero off<br/>
Those horses to the earth. And Sol, his sire,<br/>
Meeting him as he fell, caught up in hand<br/>
The ever-blazing lampion of the world,<br/>
And drave together the pell-mell horses there<br/>
And yoked them all a-tremble, and amain,<br/>
Steering them over along their own old road,<br/>
Restored the cosmos,—as forsooth we hear<br/>
From songs of ancient poets of the Greeks—<br/>
A tale too far away from truth, meseems.<br/>
For fire can win when from the infinite<br/>
Has risen a larger throng of particles<br/>
Of fiery stuff; and then its powers succumb,<br/>
Somehow subdued again, or else at last<br/>
It shrivels in torrid atmospheres the world.<br/>
And whilom water too began to win—<br/>
As goes the story—when it overwhelmed<br/>
The lives of men with billows; and thereafter,<br/>
When all that force of water-stuff which forth<br/>
From out the infinite had risen up<br/>
Did now retire, as somehow turned aside,<br/>
The rain-storms stopped, and streams their fury checked.<br/></p>
<p>FORMATION OF THE WORLD AND<br/>
ASTRONOMICAL QUESTIONS<br/></p>
<p>But in what modes that conflux of first-stuff<br/>
Did found the multitudinous universe<br/>
Of earth, and sky, and the unfathomed deeps<br/>
Of ocean, and courses of the sun and moon,<br/>
I'll now in order tell. For of a truth<br/>
Neither by counsel did the primal germs<br/>
'Stablish themselves, as by keen act of mind,<br/>
Each in its proper place; nor did they make,<br/>
Forsooth, a compact how each germ should move;<br/>
But, lo, because primordials of things,<br/>
Many in many modes, astir by blows<br/>
From immemorial aeons, in motion too<br/>
By their own weights, have evermore been wont<br/>
To be so borne along and in all modes<br/>
To meet together and to try all sorts<br/>
Which, by combining one with other, they<br/>
Are powerful to create: because of this<br/>
It comes to pass that those primordials,<br/>
Diffused far and wide through mighty aeons,<br/>
The while they unions try, and motions too,<br/>
Of every kind, meet at the last amain,<br/>
And so become oft the commencements fit<br/>
Of mighty things—earth, sea, and sky, and race<br/>
Of living creatures.<br/>
<br/>
In that long-ago<br/>
The wheel of the sun could nowhere be discerned<br/>
Flying far up with its abounding blaze,<br/>
Nor constellations of the mighty world,<br/>
Nor ocean, nor heaven, nor even earth nor air.<br/>
Nor aught of things like unto things of ours<br/>
Could then be seen—but only some strange storm<br/>
And a prodigious hurly-burly mass<br/>
Compounded of all kinds of primal germs,<br/>
Whose battling discords in disorder kept<br/>
Interstices, and paths, coherencies,<br/>
And weights, and blows, encounterings, and motions,<br/>
Because, by reason of their forms unlike<br/>
And varied shapes, they could not all thuswise<br/>
Remain conjoined nor harmoniously<br/>
Have interplay of movements. But from there<br/>
Portions began to fly asunder, and like<br/>
With like to join, and to block out a world,<br/>
And to divide its members and dispose<br/>
Its mightier parts—that is, to set secure<br/>
The lofty heavens from the lands, and cause<br/>
The sea to spread with waters separate,<br/>
And fires of ether separate and pure<br/>
Likewise to congregate apart.<br/>
<br/>
For, lo,<br/>
First came together the earthy particles<br/>
(As being heavy and intertangled) there<br/>
In the mid-region, and all began to take<br/>
The lowest abodes; and ever the more they got<br/>
One with another intertangled, the more<br/>
They pressed from out their mass those particles<br/>
Which were to form the sea, the stars, the sun,<br/>
And moon, and ramparts of the mighty world—<br/>
For these consist of seeds more smooth and round<br/>
And of much smaller elements than earth.<br/>
And thus it was that ether, fraught with fire,<br/>
First broke away from out the earthen parts,<br/>
Athrough the innumerable pores of earth,<br/>
And raised itself aloft, and with itself<br/>
Bore lightly off the many starry fires;<br/>
And not far otherwise we often see<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>And the still lakes and the perennial streams<br/>
Exhale a mist, and even as earth herself<br/>
Is seen at times to smoke, when first at dawn<br/>
The light of the sun, the many-rayed, begins<br/>
To redden into gold, over the grass<br/>
Begemmed with dew. When all of these are brought<br/>
Together overhead, the clouds on high<br/>
With now concreted body weave a cover<br/>
Beneath the heavens. And thuswise ether too,<br/>
Light and diffusive, with concreted body<br/>
On all sides spread, on all sides bent itself<br/>
Into a dome, and, far and wide diffused<br/>
On unto every region on all sides,<br/>
Thus hedged all else within its greedy clasp.<br/>
Hard upon ether came the origins<br/>
Of sun and moon, whose globes revolve in air<br/>
Midway between the earth and mightiest ether,—<br/>
For neither took them, since they weighed too little<br/>
To sink and settle, but too much to glide<br/>
Along the upmost shores; and yet they are<br/>
In such a wise midway between the twain<br/>
As ever to whirl their living bodies round,<br/>
And ever to dure as parts of the wide Whole;<br/>
In the same fashion as certain members may<br/>
In us remain at rest, whilst others move.<br/>
When, then, these substances had been withdrawn,<br/>
Amain the earth, where now extend the vast<br/>
Cerulean zones of all the level seas,<br/>
Caved in, and down along the hollows poured<br/>
The whirlpools of her brine; and day by day<br/>
The more the tides of ether and rays of sun<br/>
On every side constrained into one mass<br/>
The earth by lashing it again, again,<br/>
Upon its outer edges (so that then,<br/>
Being thus beat upon, 'twas all condensed<br/>
About its proper centre), ever the more<br/>
The salty sweat, from out its body squeezed,<br/>
Augmented ocean and the fields of foam<br/>
By seeping through its frame, and all the more<br/>
Those many particles of heat and air<br/>
Escaping, began to fly aloft, and form,<br/>
By condensation there afar from earth,<br/>
The high refulgent circuits of the heavens.<br/>
The plains began to sink, and windy slopes<br/>
Of the high mountains to increase; for rocks<br/>
Could not subside, nor all the parts of ground<br/>
Settle alike to one same level there.<br/>
<br/>
Thus, then, the massy weight of earth stood firm<br/>
With now concreted body, when (as 'twere)<br/>
All of the slime of the world, heavy and gross,<br/>
Had run together and settled at the bottom,<br/>
Like lees or bilge. Then ocean, then the air,<br/>
Then ether herself, the fraught-with-fire, were all<br/>
Left with their liquid bodies pure and free,<br/>
And each more lighter than the next below;<br/>
And ether, most light and liquid of the three,<br/>
Floats on above the long aerial winds,<br/>
Nor with the brawling of the winds of air<br/>
Mingles its liquid body. It doth leave<br/>
All there—those under-realms below her heights—<br/>
There to be overset in whirlwinds wild,—<br/>
Doth leave all there to brawl in wayward gusts,<br/>
Whilst, gliding with a fixed impulse still,<br/>
Itself it bears its fires along. For, lo,<br/>
That ether can flow thus steadily on, on,<br/>
With one unaltered urge, the Pontus proves—<br/>
That sea which floweth forth with fixed tides,<br/>
Keeping one onward tenor as it glides.<br/>
<br/>
And that the earth may there abide at rest<br/>
In the mid-region of the world, it needs<br/>
Must vanish bit by bit in weight and lessen,<br/>
And have another substance underneath,<br/>
Conjoined to it from its earliest age<br/>
In linked unison with the vasty world's<br/>
Realms of the air in which it roots and lives.<br/>
On this account, the earth is not a load,<br/>
Nor presses down on winds of air beneath;<br/>
Even as unto a man his members be<br/>
Without all weight—the head is not a load<br/>
Unto the neck; nor do we feel the whole<br/>
Weight of the body to centre in the feet.<br/>
But whatso weights come on us from without,<br/>
Weights laid upon us, these harass and chafe,<br/>
Though often far lighter. For to such degree<br/>
It matters always what the innate powers<br/>
Of any given thing may be. The earth<br/>
Was, then, no alien substance fetched amain,<br/>
And from no alien firmament cast down<br/>
On alien air; but was conceived, like air,<br/>
In the first origin of this the world,<br/>
As a fixed portion of the same, as now<br/>
Our members are seen to be a part of us.<br/>
<br/>
Besides, the earth, when of a sudden shook<br/>
By the big thunder, doth with her motion shake<br/>
All that's above her—which she ne'er could do<br/>
By any means, were earth not bounden fast<br/>
Unto the great world's realms of air and sky:<br/>
For they cohere together with common roots,<br/>
Conjoined both, even from their earliest age,<br/>
In linked unison. Aye, seest thou not<br/>
That this most subtle energy of soul<br/>
Supports our body, though so heavy a weight,—<br/>
Because, indeed, 'tis with it so conjoined<br/>
In linked unison? What power, in sum,<br/>
Can raise with agile leap our body aloft,<br/>
Save energy of mind which steers the limbs?<br/>
Now seest thou not how powerful may be<br/>
A subtle nature, when conjoined it is<br/>
With heavy body, as air is with the earth<br/>
Conjoined, and energy of mind with us?<br/>
<br/>
Now let us sing what makes the stars to move.<br/>
In first place, if the mighty sphere of heaven<br/>
Revolveth round, then needs we must aver<br/>
That on the upper and the under pole<br/>
Presses a certain air, and from without<br/>
Confines them and encloseth at each end;<br/>
And that, moreover, another air above<br/>
Streams on athwart the top of the sphere and tends<br/>
In same direction as are rolled along<br/>
The glittering stars of the eternal world;<br/>
Or that another still streams on below<br/>
To whirl the sphere from under up and on<br/>
In opposite direction—as we see<br/>
The rivers turn the wheels and water-scoops.<br/>
It may be also that the heavens do all<br/>
Remain at rest, whilst yet are borne along<br/>
The lucid constellations; either because<br/>
Swift tides of ether are by sky enclosed,<br/>
And whirl around, seeking a passage out,<br/>
And everywhere make roll the starry fires<br/>
Through the Summanian regions of the sky;<br/>
Or else because some air, streaming along<br/>
From an eternal quarter off beyond,<br/>
Whileth the driven fires, or, then, because<br/>
The fires themselves have power to creep along,<br/>
Going wherever their food invites and calls,<br/>
And feeding their flaming bodies everywhere<br/>
Throughout the sky. Yet which of these is cause<br/>
In this our world 'tis hard to say for sure;<br/>
But what can be throughout the universe,<br/>
In divers worlds on divers plan create,<br/>
This only do I show, and follow on<br/>
To assign unto the motions of the stars<br/>
Even several causes which 'tis possible<br/>
Exist throughout the universal All;<br/>
Of which yet one must be the cause even here<br/>
Which maketh motion for our constellations.<br/>
Yet to decide which one of them it be<br/>
Is not the least the business of a man<br/>
Advancing step by cautious step, as I.<br/>
<br/>
Nor can the sun's wheel larger be by much<br/>
Nor its own blaze much less than either seems<br/>
Unto our senses. For from whatso spaces<br/>
Fires have the power on us to cast their beams<br/>
And blow their scorching exhalations forth<br/>
Against our members, those same distances<br/>
Take nothing by those intervals away<br/>
From bulk of flames; and to the sight the fire<br/>
Is nothing shrunken. Therefore, since the heat<br/>
And the outpoured light of skiey sun<br/>
Arrive our senses and caress our limbs,<br/>
Form too and bigness of the sun must look<br/>
Even here from earth just as they really be,<br/>
So that thou canst scarce nothing take or add.<br/>
And whether the journeying moon illuminate<br/>
The regions round with bastard beams, or throw<br/>
From off her proper body her own light,—<br/>
Whichever it be, she journeys with a form<br/>
Naught larger than the form doth seem to be<br/>
Which we with eyes of ours perceive. For all<br/>
The far removed objects of our gaze<br/>
Seem through much air confused in their look<br/>
Ere minished in their bigness. Wherefore, moon,<br/>
Since she presents bright look and clear-cut form,<br/>
May there on high by us on earth be seen<br/>
Just as she is with extreme bounds defined,<br/>
And just of the size. And lastly, whatso fires<br/>
Of ether thou from earth beholdest, these<br/>
Thou mayst consider as possibly of size<br/>
The least bit less, or larger by a hair<br/>
Than they appear—since whatso fires we view<br/>
Here in the lands of earth are seen to change<br/>
From time to time their size to less or more<br/>
Only the least, when more or less away,<br/>
So long as still they bicker clear, and still<br/>
Their glow's perceived.<br/>
<br/>
Nor need there be for men<br/>
Astonishment that yonder sun so small<br/>
Can yet send forth so great a light as fills<br/>
Oceans and all the lands and sky aflood,<br/>
And with its fiery exhalations steeps<br/>
The world at large. For it may be, indeed,<br/>
That one vast-flowing well-spring of the whole<br/>
Wide world from here hath opened and out-gushed,<br/>
And shot its light abroad; because thuswise<br/>
The elements of fiery exhalations<br/>
From all the world around together come,<br/>
And thuswise flow into a bulk so big<br/>
That from one single fountain-head may stream<br/>
This heat and light. And seest thou not, indeed,<br/>
How widely one small water-spring may wet<br/>
The meadow-lands at times and flood the fields?<br/>
'Tis even possible, besides, that heat<br/>
From forth the sun's own fire, albeit that fire<br/>
Be not a great, may permeate the air<br/>
With the fierce hot—if but, perchance, the air<br/>
Be of condition and so tempered then<br/>
As to be kindled, even when beat upon<br/>
Only by little particles of heat—<br/>
Just as we sometimes see the standing grain<br/>
Or stubble straw in conflagration all<br/>
From one lone spark. And possibly the sun,<br/>
Agleam on high with rosy lampion,<br/>
Possesses about him with invisible heats<br/>
A plenteous fire, by no effulgence marked,<br/>
So that he maketh, he, the Fraught-with-fire,<br/>
Increase to such degree the force of rays.<br/>
<br/>
Nor is there one sure cause revealed to men<br/>
How the sun journeys from his summer haunts<br/>
On to the mid-most winter turning-points<br/>
In Capricorn, the thence reverting veers<br/>
Back to solstitial goals of Cancer; nor<br/>
How 'tis the moon is seen each month to cross<br/>
That very distance which in traversing<br/>
The sun consumes the measure of a year.<br/>
I say, no one clear reason hath been given<br/>
For these affairs. Yet chief in likelihood<br/>
Seemeth the doctrine which the holy thought<br/>
Of great Democritus lays down: that ever<br/>
The nearer the constellations be to earth<br/>
The less can they by whirling of the sky<br/>
Be borne along, because those skiey powers<br/>
Of speed aloft do vanish and decrease<br/>
In under-regions, and the sun is thus<br/>
Left by degrees behind amongst those signs<br/>
That follow after, since the sun he lies<br/>
Far down below the starry signs that blaze;<br/>
And the moon lags even tardier than the sun:<br/>
In just so far as is her course removed<br/>
From upper heaven and nigh unto the lands,<br/>
In just so far she fails to keep the pace<br/>
With starry signs above; for just so far<br/>
As feebler is the whirl that bears her on,<br/>
(Being, indeed, still lower than the sun),<br/>
In just so far do all the starry signs,<br/>
Circling around, o'ertake her and o'erpass.<br/>
Therefore it happens that the moon appears<br/>
More swiftly to return to any sign<br/>
Along the Zodiac, than doth the sun,<br/>
Because those signs do visit her again<br/>
More swiftly than they visit the great sun.<br/>
It can be also that two streams of air<br/>
Alternately at fixed periods<br/>
Blow out from transverse regions of the world,<br/>
Of which the one may thrust the sun away<br/>
From summer-signs to mid-most winter goals<br/>
And rigors of the cold, and the other then<br/>
May cast him back from icy shades of chill<br/>
Even to the heat-fraught regions and the signs<br/>
That blaze along the Zodiac. So, too,<br/>
We must suppose the moon and all the stars,<br/>
Which through the mighty and sidereal years<br/>
Roll round in mighty orbits, may be sped<br/>
By streams of air from regions alternate.<br/>
Seest thou not also how the clouds be sped<br/>
By contrary winds to regions contrary,<br/>
The lower clouds diversely from the upper?<br/>
Then, why may yonder stars in ether there<br/>
Along their mighty orbits not be borne<br/>
By currents opposite the one to other?<br/>
<br/>
But night o'erwhelms the lands with vasty murk<br/>
Either when sun, after his diurnal course,<br/>
Hath walked the ultimate regions of the sky<br/>
And wearily hath panted forth his fires,<br/>
Shivered by their long journeying and wasted<br/>
By traversing the multitudinous air,<br/>
Or else because the self-same force that drave<br/>
His orb along above the lands compels<br/>
Him then to turn his course beneath the lands.<br/>
Matuta also at a fixed hour<br/>
Spreadeth the roseate morning out along<br/>
The coasts of heaven and deploys the light,<br/>
Either because the self-same sun, returning<br/>
Under the lands, aspires to seize the sky,<br/>
Striving to set it blazing with his rays<br/>
Ere he himself appear, or else because<br/>
Fires then will congregate and many seeds<br/>
Of heat are wont, even at a fixed time,<br/>
To stream together—gendering evermore<br/>
New suns and light. Just so the story goes<br/>
That from the Idaean mountain-tops are seen<br/>
Dispersed fires upon the break of day<br/>
Which thence combine, as 'twere, into one ball<br/>
And form an orb. Nor yet in these affairs<br/>
Is aught for wonder that these seeds of fire<br/>
Can thus together stream at time so fixed<br/>
And shape anew the splendour of the sun.<br/>
For many facts we see which come to pass<br/>
At fixed time in all things: burgeon shrubs<br/>
At fixed time, and at a fixed time<br/>
They cast their flowers; and Eld commands the teeth,<br/>
At time as surely fixed, to drop away,<br/>
And Youth commands the growing boy to bloom<br/>
With the soft down and let from both his cheeks<br/>
The soft beard fall. And lastly, thunder-bolts,<br/>
Snow, rains, clouds, winds, at seasons of the year<br/>
Nowise unfixed, all do come to pass.<br/>
For where, even from their old primordial start<br/>
Causes have ever worked in such a way,<br/>
And where, even from the world's first origin,<br/>
Thuswise have things befallen, so even now<br/>
After a fixed order they come round<br/>
In sequence also.<br/>
<br/>
Likewise, days may wax<br/>
Whilst the nights wane, and daylight minished be<br/>
Whilst nights do take their augmentations,<br/>
Either because the self-same sun, coursing<br/>
Under the lands and over in two arcs,<br/>
A longer and a briefer, doth dispart<br/>
The coasts of ether and divides in twain<br/>
His orbit all unequally, and adds,<br/>
As round he's borne, unto the one half there<br/>
As much as from the other half he's ta'en,<br/>
Until he then arrives that sign of heaven<br/>
Where the year's node renders the shades of night<br/>
Equal unto the periods of light.<br/>
For when the sun is midway on his course<br/>
Between the blasts of northwind and of south,<br/>
Heaven keeps his two goals parted equally,<br/>
By virtue of the fixed position old<br/>
Of the whole starry Zodiac, through which<br/>
That sun, in winding onward, takes a year,<br/>
Illumining the sky and all the lands<br/>
With oblique light—as men declare to us<br/>
Who by their diagrams have charted well<br/>
Those regions of the sky which be adorned<br/>
With the arranged signs of Zodiac.<br/>
Or else, because in certain parts the air<br/>
Under the lands is denser, the tremulous<br/>
Bright beams of fire do waver tardily,<br/>
Nor easily can penetrate that air<br/>
Nor yet emerge unto their rising-place:<br/>
For this it is that nights in winter time<br/>
Do linger long, ere comes the many-rayed<br/>
Round Badge of the day. Or else because, as said,<br/>
In alternating seasons of the year<br/>
Fires, now more quick, and now more slow, are wont<br/>
To stream together,—the fires which make the sun<br/>
To rise in some one spot—therefore it is<br/>
That those men seem to speak the truth [who hold<br/>
A new sun is with each new daybreak born].<br/>
<br/>
The moon she possibly doth shine because<br/>
Strook by the rays of sun, and day by day<br/>
May turn unto our gaze her light, the more<br/>
She doth recede from orb of sun, until,<br/>
Facing him opposite across the world,<br/>
She hath with full effulgence gleamed abroad,<br/>
And, at her rising as she soars above,<br/>
Hath there observed his setting; thence likewise<br/>
She needs must hide, as 'twere, her light behind<br/>
By slow degrees, the nearer now she glides,<br/>
Along the circle of the Zodiac,<br/>
From her far place toward fires of yonder sun,—<br/>
As those men hold who feign the moon to be<br/>
Just like a ball and to pursue a course<br/>
Betwixt the sun and earth. There is, again,<br/>
Some reason to suppose that moon may roll<br/>
With light her very own, and thus display<br/>
The varied shapes of her resplendence there.<br/>
For near her is, percase, another body,<br/>
Invisible, because devoid of light,<br/>
Borne on and gliding all along with her,<br/>
Which in three modes may block and blot her disk.<br/>
Again, she may revolve upon herself,<br/>
Like to a ball's sphere—if perchance that be—<br/>
One half of her dyed o'er with glowing light,<br/>
And by the revolution of that sphere<br/>
She may beget for us her varying shapes,<br/>
Until she turns that fiery part of her<br/>
Full to the sight and open eyes of men;<br/>
Thence by slow stages round and back she whirls,<br/>
Withdrawing thus the luminiferous part<br/>
Of her sphered mass and ball, as, verily,<br/>
The Babylonian doctrine of Chaldees,<br/>
Refuting the art of Greek astrologers,<br/>
Labours, in opposition, to prove sure—<br/>
As if, forsooth, the thing for which each fights,<br/>
Might not alike be true,—or aught there were<br/>
Wherefore thou mightest risk embracing one<br/>
More than the other notion. Then, again,<br/>
Why a new moon might not forevermore<br/>
Created be with fixed successions there<br/>
Of shapes and with configurations fixed,<br/>
And why each day that bright created moon<br/>
Might not miscarry and another be,<br/>
In its stead and place, engendered anew,<br/>
'Tis hard to show by reason, or by words<br/>
To prove absurd—since, lo, so many things<br/>
Can be create with fixed successions:<br/>
Spring-time and Venus come, and Venus' boy,<br/>
The winged harbinger, steps on before,<br/>
And hard on Zephyr's foot-prints Mother Flora,<br/>
Sprinkling the ways before them, filleth all<br/>
With colours and with odours excellent;<br/>
Whereafter follows arid Heat, and he<br/>
Companioned is by Ceres, dusty one,<br/>
And by the Etesian Breezes of the north;<br/>
Then cometh Autumn on, and with him steps<br/>
Lord Bacchus, and then other Seasons too<br/>
And other Winds do follow—the high roar<br/>
Of great Volturnus, and the Southwind strong<br/>
With thunder-bolts. At last earth's Shortest-Day<br/>
Bears on to men the snows and brings again<br/>
The numbing cold. And Winter follows her,<br/>
His teeth with chills a-chatter. Therefore, 'tis<br/>
The less a marvel, if at fixed time<br/>
A moon is thus begotten and again<br/>
At fixed time destroyed, since things so many<br/>
Can come to being thus at fixed time.<br/>
Likewise, the sun's eclipses and the moon's<br/>
Far occultations rightly thou mayst deem<br/>
<br/>
As due to several causes. For, indeed,<br/>
Why should the moon be able to shut out<br/>
Earth from the light of sun, and on the side<br/>
To earthward thrust her high head under sun,<br/>
Opposing dark orb to his glowing beams—<br/>
And yet, at same time, one suppose the effect<br/>
Could not result from some one other body<br/>
Which glides devoid of light forevermore?<br/>
Again, why could not sun, in weakened state,<br/>
At fixed time for-lose his fires, and then,<br/>
When he has passed on along the air<br/>
Beyond the regions, hostile to his flames,<br/>
That quench and kill his fires, why could not he<br/>
Renew his light? And why should earth in turn<br/>
Have power to rob the moon of light, and there,<br/>
Herself on high, keep the sun hid beneath,<br/>
Whilst the moon glideth in her monthly course<br/>
Athrough the rigid shadows of the cone?—<br/>
And yet, at same time, some one other body<br/>
Not have the power to under-pass the moon,<br/>
Or glide along above the orb of sun,<br/>
Breaking his rays and outspread light asunder?<br/>
And still, if moon herself refulgent be<br/>
With her own sheen, why could she not at times<br/>
In some one quarter of the mighty world<br/>
Grow weak and weary, whilst she passeth through<br/>
Regions unfriendly to the beams her own?<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> ORIGINS OF VEGETABLE AND ANIMAL LIFE </h2>
<p>And now to what remains!—Since I've resolved<br/>
By what arrangements all things come to pass<br/>
Through the blue regions of the mighty world,—<br/>
How we can know what energy and cause<br/>
Started the various courses of the sun<br/>
And the moon's goings, and by what far means<br/>
They can succumb, the while with thwarted light,<br/>
And veil with shade the unsuspecting lands,<br/>
When, as it were, they blink, and then again<br/>
With open eye survey all regions wide,<br/>
Resplendent with white radiance—I do now<br/>
Return unto the world's primeval age<br/>
And tell what first the soft young fields of earth<br/>
With earliest parturition had decreed<br/>
To raise in air unto the shores of light<br/>
And to entrust unto the wayward winds.<br/>
In the beginning, earth gave forth, around<br/>
The hills and over all the length of plains,<br/>
The race of grasses and the shining green;<br/>
The flowery meadows sparkled all aglow<br/>
With greening colour, and thereafter, lo,<br/>
Unto the divers kinds of trees was given<br/>
An emulous impulse mightily to shoot,<br/>
With a free rein, aloft into the air.<br/>
As feathers and hairs and bristles are begot<br/>
The first on members of the four-foot breeds<br/>
And on the bodies of the strong-y-winged,<br/>
Thus then the new Earth first of all put forth<br/>
Grasses and shrubs, and afterward begat<br/>
The mortal generations, there upsprung—<br/>
Innumerable in modes innumerable—<br/>
After diverging fashions. For from sky<br/>
These breathing-creatures never can have dropped,<br/>
Nor the land-dwellers ever have come up<br/>
Out of sea-pools of salt. How true remains,<br/>
How merited is that adopted name<br/>
Of earth—"The Mother!"—since from out the earth<br/>
Are all begotten. And even now arise<br/>
From out the loams how many living things—<br/>
Concreted by the rains and heat of the sun.<br/>
Wherefore 'tis less a marvel, if they sprang<br/>
In Long Ago more many, and more big,<br/>
Matured of those days in the fresh young years<br/>
Of earth and ether. First of all, the race<br/>
Of the winged ones and parti-coloured birds,<br/>
Hatched out in spring-time, left their eggs behind;<br/>
As now-a-days in summer tree-crickets<br/>
Do leave their shiny husks of own accord,<br/>
Seeking their food and living. Then it was<br/>
This earth of thine first gave unto the day<br/>
The mortal generations; for prevailed<br/>
Among the fields abounding hot and wet.<br/>
And hence, where any fitting spot was given,<br/>
There 'gan to grow womb-cavities, by roots<br/>
Affixed to earth. And when in ripened time<br/>
The age of the young within (that sought the air<br/>
And fled earth's damps) had burst these wombs, O then<br/>
Would Nature thither turn the pores of earth<br/>
And make her spurt from open veins a juice<br/>
Like unto milk; even as a woman now<br/>
Is filled, at child-bearing, with the sweet milk,<br/>
Because all that swift stream of aliment<br/>
Is thither turned unto the mother-breasts.<br/>
There earth would furnish to the children food;<br/>
Warmth was their swaddling cloth, the grass their bed<br/>
Abounding in soft down. Earth's newness then<br/>
Would rouse no dour spells of the bitter cold,<br/>
Nor extreme heats nor winds of mighty powers—<br/>
For all things grow and gather strength through time<br/>
In like proportions; and then earth was young.<br/>
<br/>
Wherefore, again, again, how merited<br/>
Is that adopted name of Earth—The Mother!—<br/>
Since she herself begat the human race,<br/>
And at one well-nigh fixed time brought forth<br/>
Each breast that ranges raving round about<br/>
Upon the mighty mountains and all birds<br/>
Aerial with many a varied shape.<br/>
But, lo, because her bearing years must end,<br/>
She ceased, like to a woman worn by eld.<br/>
For lapsing aeons change the nature of<br/>
The whole wide world, and all things needs must take<br/>
One status after other, nor aught persists<br/>
Forever like itself. All things depart;<br/>
Nature she changeth all, compelleth all<br/>
To transformation. Lo, this moulders down,<br/>
A-slack with weary eld, and that, again,<br/>
Prospers in glory, issuing from contempt.<br/>
In suchwise, then, the lapsing aeons change<br/>
The nature of the whole wide world, and earth<br/>
Taketh one status after other. And what<br/>
She bore of old, she now can bear no longer,<br/>
And what she never bore, she can to-day.<br/>
<br/>
In those days also the telluric world<br/>
Strove to beget the monsters that upsprung<br/>
With their astounding visages and limbs—<br/>
The Man-woman—a thing betwixt the twain,<br/>
Yet neither, and from either sex remote—<br/>
Some gruesome Boggles orphaned of the feet,<br/>
Some widowed of the hands, dumb Horrors too<br/>
Without a mouth, or blind Ones of no eye,<br/>
Or Bulks all shackled by their legs and arms<br/>
Cleaving unto the body fore and aft,<br/>
Thuswise, that never could they do or go,<br/>
Nor shun disaster, nor take the good they would.<br/>
And other prodigies and monsters earth<br/>
Was then begetting of this sort—in vain,<br/>
Since Nature banned with horror their increase,<br/>
And powerless were they to reach unto<br/>
The coveted flower of fair maturity,<br/>
Or to find aliment, or to intertwine<br/>
In works of Venus. For we see there must<br/>
Concur in life conditions manifold,<br/>
If life is ever by begetting life<br/>
To forge the generations one by one:<br/>
First, foods must be; and, next, a path whereby<br/>
The seeds of impregnation in the frame<br/>
May ooze, released from the members all;<br/>
Last, the possession of those instruments<br/>
Whereby the male with female can unite,<br/>
The one with other in mutual ravishments.<br/>
<br/>
And in the ages after monsters died,<br/>
Perforce there perished many a stock, unable<br/>
By propagation to forge a progeny.<br/>
For whatsoever creatures thou beholdest<br/>
Breathing the breath of life, the same have been<br/>
Even from their earliest age preserved alive<br/>
By cunning, or by valour, or at least<br/>
By speed of foot or wing. And many a stock<br/>
Remaineth yet, because of use to man,<br/>
And so committed to man's guardianship.<br/>
Valour hath saved alive fierce lion-breeds<br/>
And many another terrorizing race,<br/>
Cunning the foxes, flight the antlered stags.<br/>
Light-sleeping dogs with faithful heart in breast,<br/>
However, and every kind begot from seed<br/>
Of beasts of draft, as, too, the woolly flocks<br/>
And horned cattle, all, my Memmius,<br/>
Have been committed to guardianship of men.<br/>
For anxiously they fled the savage beasts,<br/>
And peace they sought and their abundant foods,<br/>
Obtained with never labours of their own,<br/>
Which we secure to them as fit rewards<br/>
For their good service. But those beasts to whom<br/>
Nature has granted naught of these same things—<br/>
Beasts quite unfit by own free will to thrive<br/>
And vain for any service unto us<br/>
In thanks for which we should permit their kind<br/>
To feed and be in our protection safe—<br/>
Those, of a truth, were wont to be exposed,<br/>
Enshackled in the gruesome bonds of doom,<br/>
As prey and booty for the rest, until<br/>
Nature reduced that stock to utter death.<br/>
<br/>
But Centaurs ne'er have been, nor can there be<br/>
Creatures of twofold stock and double frame,<br/>
Compact of members alien in kind,<br/>
Yet formed with equal function, equal force<br/>
In every bodily part—a fact thou mayst,<br/>
However dull thy wits, well learn from this:<br/>
The horse, when his three years have rolled away,<br/>
Flowers in his prime of vigour; but the boy<br/>
Not so, for oft even then he gropes in sleep<br/>
After the milky nipples of the breasts,<br/>
An infant still. And later, when at last<br/>
The lusty powers of horses and stout limbs,<br/>
Now weak through lapsing life, do fail with age,<br/>
Lo, only then doth youth with flowering years<br/>
Begin for boys, and clothe their ruddy cheeks<br/>
With the soft down. So never deem, percase,<br/>
That from a man and from the seed of horse,<br/>
The beast of draft, can Centaurs be composed<br/>
Or e'er exist alive, nor Scyllas be—<br/>
The half-fish bodies girdled with mad dogs—<br/>
Nor others of this sort, in whom we mark<br/>
Members discordant each with each; for ne'er<br/>
At one same time they reach their flower of age<br/>
Or gain and lose full vigour of their frame,<br/>
And never burn with one same lust of love,<br/>
And never in their habits they agree,<br/>
Nor find the same foods equally delightsome—<br/>
Sooth, as one oft may see the bearded goats<br/>
Batten upon the hemlock which to man<br/>
Is violent poison. Once again, since flame<br/>
Is wont to scorch and burn the tawny bulks<br/>
Of the great lions as much as other kinds<br/>
Of flesh and blood existing in the lands,<br/>
How could it be that she, Chimaera lone,<br/>
With triple body—fore, a lion she;<br/>
And aft, a dragon; and betwixt, a goat—<br/>
Might at the mouth from out the body belch<br/>
Infuriate flame? Wherefore, the man who feigns<br/>
Such beings could have been engendered<br/>
When earth was new and the young sky was fresh<br/>
(Basing his empty argument on new)<br/>
May babble with like reason many whims<br/>
Into our ears: he'll say, perhaps, that then<br/>
Rivers of gold through every landscape flowed,<br/>
That trees were wont with precious stones to flower,<br/>
Or that in those far aeons man was born<br/>
With such gigantic length and lift of limbs<br/>
As to be able, based upon his feet,<br/>
Deep oceans to bestride or with his hands<br/>
To whirl the firmament around his head.<br/>
For though in earth were many seeds of things<br/>
In the old time when this telluric world<br/>
First poured the breeds of animals abroad,<br/>
Still that is nothing of a sign that then<br/>
Such hybrid creatures could have been begot<br/>
And limbs of all beasts heterogeneous<br/>
Have been together knit; because, indeed,<br/>
The divers kinds of grasses and the grains<br/>
And the delightsome trees—which even now<br/>
Spring up abounding from within the earth—<br/>
Can still ne'er be begotten with their stems<br/>
Begrafted into one; but each sole thing<br/>
Proceeds according to its proper wont<br/>
And all conserve their own distinctions based<br/>
In nature's fixed decree.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> ORIGINS AND SAVAGE PERIOD OF MANKIND </h2>
<p>But mortal man<br/>
Was then far hardier in the old champaign,<br/>
As well he should be, since a hardier earth<br/>
Had him begotten; builded too was he<br/>
Of bigger and more solid bones within,<br/>
And knit with stalwart sinews through the flesh,<br/>
Nor easily seized by either heat or cold,<br/>
Or alien food or any ail or irk.<br/>
And whilst so many lustrums of the sun<br/>
Rolled on across the sky, men led a life<br/>
After the roving habit of wild beasts.<br/>
Not then were sturdy guiders of curved ploughs,<br/>
And none knew then to work the fields with iron,<br/>
Or plant young shoots in holes of delved loam,<br/>
Or lop with hooked knives from off high trees<br/>
The boughs of yester-year. What sun and rains<br/>
To them had given, what earth of own accord<br/>
Created then, was boon enough to glad<br/>
Their simple hearts. Mid acorn-laden oaks<br/>
Would they refresh their bodies for the nonce;<br/>
And the wild berries of the arbute-tree,<br/>
Which now thou seest to ripen purple-red<br/>
In winter time, the old telluric soil<br/>
Would bear then more abundant and more big.<br/>
And many coarse foods, too, in long ago<br/>
The blooming freshness of the rank young world<br/>
Produced, enough for those poor wretches there.<br/>
And rivers and springs would summon them of old<br/>
To slake the thirst, as now from the great hills<br/>
The water's down-rush calls aloud and far<br/>
The thirsty generations of the wild.<br/>
So, too, they sought the grottos of the Nymphs—<br/>
The woodland haunts discovered as they ranged—<br/>
From forth of which they knew that gliding rills<br/>
With gush and splash abounding laved the rocks,<br/>
The dripping rocks, and trickled from above<br/>
Over the verdant moss; and here and there<br/>
Welled up and burst across the open flats.<br/>
As yet they knew not to enkindle fire<br/>
Against the cold, nor hairy pelts to use<br/>
And clothe their bodies with the spoils of beasts;<br/>
But huddled in groves, and mountain-caves, and woods,<br/>
And 'mongst the thickets hid their squalid backs,<br/>
When driven to flee the lashings of the winds<br/>
And the big rains. Nor could they then regard<br/>
The general good, nor did they know to use<br/>
In common any customs, any laws:<br/>
Whatever of booty fortune unto each<br/>
Had proffered, each alone would bear away,<br/>
By instinct trained for self to thrive and live.<br/>
And Venus in the forests then would link<br/>
The lovers' bodies; for the woman yielded<br/>
Either from mutual flame, or from the man's<br/>
Impetuous fury and insatiate lust,<br/>
Or from a bribe—as acorn-nuts, choice pears,<br/>
Or the wild berries of the arbute-tree.<br/>
And trusting wondrous strength of hands and legs,<br/>
They'd chase the forest-wanderers, the beasts;<br/>
And many they'd conquer, but some few they fled,<br/>
A-skulk into their hiding-places...<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>With the flung stones and with the ponderous heft<br/>
Of gnarled branch. And by the time of night<br/>
O'ertaken, they would throw, like bristly boars,<br/>
Their wildman's limbs naked upon the earth,<br/>
Rolling themselves in leaves and fronded boughs.<br/>
Nor would they call with lamentations loud<br/>
Around the fields for daylight and the sun,<br/>
Quaking and wand'ring in shadows of the night;<br/>
But, silent and buried in a sleep, they'd wait<br/>
Until the sun with rosy flambeau brought<br/>
The glory to the sky. From childhood wont<br/>
Ever to see the dark and day begot<br/>
In times alternate, never might they be<br/>
Wildered by wild misgiving, lest a night<br/>
Eternal should possess the lands, with light<br/>
Of sun withdrawn forever. But their care<br/>
Was rather that the clans of savage beasts<br/>
Would often make their sleep-time horrible<br/>
For those poor wretches; and, from home y-driven,<br/>
They'd flee their rocky shelters at approach<br/>
Of boar, the spumy-lipped, or lion strong,<br/>
And in the midnight yield with terror up<br/>
To those fierce guests their beds of out-spread leaves.<br/>
<br/>
And yet in those days not much more than now<br/>
Would generations of mortality<br/>
Leave the sweet light of fading life behind.<br/>
Indeed, in those days here and there a man,<br/>
More oftener snatched upon, and gulped by fangs,<br/>
Afforded the beasts a food that roared alive,<br/>
Echoing through groves and hills and forest-trees,<br/>
Even as he viewed his living flesh entombed<br/>
Within a living grave; whilst those whom flight<br/>
Had saved, with bone and body bitten, shrieked,<br/>
Pressing their quivering palms to loathsome sores,<br/>
With horrible voices for eternal death—<br/>
Until, forlorn of help, and witless what<br/>
Might medicine their wounds, the writhing pangs<br/>
Took them from life. But not in those far times<br/>
Would one lone day give over unto doom<br/>
A soldiery in thousands marching on<br/>
Beneath the battle-banners, nor would then<br/>
The ramping breakers of the main seas dash<br/>
Whole argosies and crews upon the rocks.<br/>
But ocean uprisen would often rave in vain,<br/>
Without all end or outcome, and give up<br/>
Its empty menacings as lightly too;<br/>
Nor soft seductions of a serene sea<br/>
Could lure by laughing billows any man<br/>
Out to disaster: for the science bold<br/>
Of ship-sailing lay dark in those far times.<br/>
Again, 'twas then that lack of food gave o'er<br/>
Men's fainting limbs to dissolution: now<br/>
'Tis plenty overwhelms. Unwary, they<br/>
Oft for themselves themselves would then outpour<br/>
The poison; now, with nicer art, themselves<br/>
They give the drafts to others.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> BEGINNINGS OF CIVILIZATION </h2>
<p>Afterwards,<br/>
When huts they had procured and pelts and fire,<br/>
And when the woman, joined unto the man,<br/>
Withdrew with him into one dwelling place,<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Were known; and when they saw an offspring born<br/>
From out themselves, then first the human race<br/>
Began to soften. For 'twas now that fire<br/>
Rendered their shivering frames less staunch to bear,<br/>
Under the canopy of the sky, the cold;<br/>
And Love reduced their shaggy hardiness;<br/>
And children, with the prattle and the kiss,<br/>
Soon broke the parents' haughty temper down.<br/>
Then, too, did neighbours 'gin to league as friends,<br/>
Eager to wrong no more or suffer wrong,<br/>
And urged for children and the womankind<br/>
Mercy, of fathers, whilst with cries and gestures<br/>
They stammered hints how meet it was that all<br/>
Should have compassion on the weak. And still,<br/>
Though concord not in every wise could then<br/>
Begotten be, a good, a goodly part<br/>
Kept faith inviolate—or else mankind<br/>
Long since had been unutterably cut off,<br/>
And propagation never could have brought<br/>
The species down the ages.<br/>
<br/>
Lest, perchance,<br/>
Concerning these affairs thou ponderest<br/>
In silent meditation, let me say<br/>
'Twas lightning brought primevally to earth<br/>
The fire for mortals, and from thence hath spread<br/>
O'er all the lands the flames of heat. For thus<br/>
Even now we see so many objects, touched<br/>
By the celestial flames, to flash aglow,<br/>
When thunderbolt has dowered them with heat.<br/>
Yet also when a many-branched tree,<br/>
Beaten by winds, writhes swaying to and fro,<br/>
Pressing 'gainst branches of a neighbour tree,<br/>
There by the power of mighty rub and rub<br/>
Is fire engendered; and at times out-flares<br/>
The scorching heat of flame, when boughs do chafe<br/>
Against the trunks. And of these causes, either<br/>
May well have given to mortal men the fire.<br/>
Next, food to cook and soften in the flame<br/>
The sun instructed, since so oft they saw<br/>
How objects mellowed, when subdued by warmth<br/>
And by the raining blows of fiery beams,<br/>
Through all the fields.<br/>
<br/>
And more and more each day<br/>
Would men more strong in sense, more wise in heart,<br/>
Teach them to change their earlier mode and life<br/>
By fire and new devices. Kings began<br/>
Cities to found and citadels to set,<br/>
As strongholds and asylums for themselves,<br/>
And flocks and fields to portion for each man<br/>
After the beauty, strength, and sense of each—<br/>
For beauty then imported much, and strength<br/>
Had its own rights supreme. Thereafter, wealth<br/>
Discovered was, and gold was brought to light,<br/>
Which soon of honour stripped both strong and fair;<br/>
For men, however beautiful in form<br/>
Or valorous, will follow in the main<br/>
The rich man's party. Yet were man to steer<br/>
His life by sounder reasoning, he'd own<br/>
Abounding riches, if with mind content<br/>
He lived by thrift; for never, as I guess,<br/>
Is there a lack of little in the world.<br/>
But men wished glory for themselves and power<br/>
Even that their fortunes on foundations firm<br/>
Might rest forever, and that they themselves,<br/>
The opulent, might pass a quiet life—<br/>
In vain, in vain; since, in the strife to climb<br/>
On to the heights of honour, men do make<br/>
Their pathway terrible; and even when once<br/>
They reach them, envy like the thunderbolt<br/>
At times will smite, O hurling headlong down<br/>
To murkiest Tartarus, in scorn; for, lo,<br/>
All summits, all regions loftier than the rest,<br/>
Smoke, blasted as by envy's thunderbolts;<br/>
So better far in quiet to obey,<br/>
Than to desire chief mastery of affairs<br/>
And ownership of empires. Be it so;<br/>
And let the weary sweat their life-blood out<br/>
All to no end, battling in hate along<br/>
The narrow path of man's ambition;<br/>
Since all their wisdom is from others' lips,<br/>
And all they seek is known from what they've heard<br/>
And less from what they've thought. Nor is this folly<br/>
Greater to-day, nor greater soon to be,<br/>
Than' twas of old.<br/>
<br/>
And therefore kings were slain,<br/>
And pristine majesty of golden thrones<br/>
And haughty sceptres lay o'erturned in dust;<br/>
And crowns, so splendid on the sovereign heads,<br/>
Soon bloody under the proletarian feet,<br/>
Groaned for their glories gone—for erst o'er-much<br/>
Dreaded, thereafter with more greedy zest<br/>
Trampled beneath the rabble heel. Thus things<br/>
Down to the vilest lees of brawling mobs<br/>
Succumbed, whilst each man sought unto himself<br/>
Dominion and supremacy. So next<br/>
Some wiser heads instructed men to found<br/>
The magisterial office, and did frame<br/>
Codes that they might consent to follow laws.<br/>
For humankind, o'er wearied with a life<br/>
Fostered by force, was ailing from its feuds;<br/>
And so the sooner of its own free will<br/>
Yielded to laws and strictest codes. For since<br/>
Each hand made ready in its wrath to take<br/>
A vengeance fiercer than by man's fair laws<br/>
Is now conceded, men on this account<br/>
Loathed the old life fostered by force. 'Tis thence<br/>
That fear of punishments defiles each prize<br/>
Of wicked days; for force and fraud ensnare<br/>
Each man around, and in the main recoil<br/>
On him from whence they sprung. Not easy 'tis<br/>
For one who violates by ugly deeds<br/>
The bonds of common peace to pass a life<br/>
Composed and tranquil. For albeit he 'scape<br/>
The race of gods and men, he yet must dread<br/>
'Twill not be hid forever—since, indeed,<br/>
So many, oft babbling on amid their dreams<br/>
Or raving in sickness, have betrayed themselves<br/>
(As stories tell) and published at last<br/>
Old secrets and the sins.<br/>
<br/>
But nature 'twas<br/>
Urged men to utter various sounds of tongue<br/>
And need and use did mould the names of things,<br/>
About in same wise as the lack-speech years<br/>
Compel young children unto gesturings,<br/>
Making them point with finger here and there<br/>
At what's before them. For each creature feels<br/>
By instinct to what use to put his powers.<br/>
Ere yet the bull-calf's scarce begotten horns<br/>
Project above his brows, with them he 'gins<br/>
Enraged to butt and savagely to thrust.<br/>
But whelps of panthers and the lion's cubs<br/>
With claws and paws and bites are at the fray<br/>
Already, when their teeth and claws be scarce<br/>
As yet engendered. So again, we see<br/>
All breeds of winged creatures trust to wings<br/>
And from their fledgling pinions seek to get<br/>
A fluttering assistance. Thus, to think<br/>
That in those days some man apportioned round<br/>
To things their names, and that from him men learned<br/>
Their first nomenclature, is foolery.<br/>
For why could he mark everything by words<br/>
And utter the various sounds of tongue, what time<br/>
The rest may be supposed powerless<br/>
To do the same? And, if the rest had not<br/>
Already one with other used words,<br/>
Whence was implanted in the teacher, then,<br/>
Fore-knowledge of their use, and whence was given<br/>
To him alone primordial faculty<br/>
To know and see in mind what 'twas he willed?<br/>
Besides, one only man could scarce subdue<br/>
An overmastered multitude to choose<br/>
To get by heart his names of things. A task<br/>
Not easy 'tis in any wise to teach<br/>
And to persuade the deaf concerning what<br/>
'Tis needful for to do. For ne'er would they<br/>
Allow, nor ne'er in anywise endure<br/>
Perpetual vain dingdong in their ears<br/>
Of spoken sounds unheard before. And what,<br/>
At last, in this affair so wondrous is,<br/>
That human race (in whom a voice and tongue<br/>
Were now in vigour) should by divers words<br/>
Denote its objects, as each divers sense<br/>
Might prompt?—since even the speechless herds, aye, since<br/>
The very generations of wild beasts<br/>
Are wont dissimilar and divers sounds<br/>
To rouse from in them, when there's fear or pain,<br/>
And when they burst with joys. And this, forsooth,<br/>
'Tis thine to know from plainest facts: when first<br/>
Huge flabby jowls of mad Molossian hounds,<br/>
Baring their hard white teeth, begin to snarl,<br/>
They threaten, with infuriate lips peeled back,<br/>
In sounds far other than with which they bark<br/>
And fill with voices all the regions round.<br/>
And when with fondling tongue they start to lick<br/>
Their puppies, or do toss them round with paws,<br/>
Feigning with gentle bites to gape and snap,<br/>
They fawn with yelps of voice far other then<br/>
Than when, alone within the house, they bay,<br/>
Or whimpering slink with cringing sides from blows.<br/>
Again the neighing of the horse, is that<br/>
Not seen to differ likewise, when the stud<br/>
In buoyant flower of his young years raves,<br/>
Goaded by winged Love, amongst the mares,<br/>
And when with widening nostrils out he snorts<br/>
The call to battle, and when haply he<br/>
Whinnies at times with terror-quaking limbs?<br/>
Lastly, the flying race, the dappled birds,<br/>
Hawks, ospreys, sea-gulls, searching food and life<br/>
Amid the ocean billows in the brine,<br/>
Utter at other times far other cries<br/>
Than when they fight for food, or with their prey<br/>
Struggle and strain. And birds there are which change<br/>
With changing weather their own raucous songs—<br/>
As long-lived generations of the crows<br/>
Or flocks of rooks, when they be said to cry<br/>
For rain and water and to call at times<br/>
For winds and gales. Ergo, if divers moods<br/>
Compel the brutes, though speechless evermore,<br/>
To send forth divers sounds, O truly then<br/>
How much more likely 'twere that mortal men<br/>
In those days could with many a different sound<br/>
Denote each separate thing.<br/>
<br/>
And now what cause<br/>
Hath spread divinities of gods abroad<br/>
Through mighty nations, and filled the cities full<br/>
Of the high altars, and led to practices<br/>
Of solemn rites in season—rites which still<br/>
Flourish in midst of great affairs of state<br/>
And midst great centres of man's civic life,<br/>
The rites whence still a poor mortality<br/>
Is grafted that quaking awe which rears aloft<br/>
Still the new temples of gods from land to land<br/>
And drives mankind to visit them in throngs<br/>
On holy days—'tis not so hard to give<br/>
Reason thereof in speech. Because, in sooth,<br/>
Even in those days would the race of man<br/>
Be seeing excelling visages of gods<br/>
With mind awake; and in his sleeps, yet more—<br/>
Bodies of wondrous growth. And, thus, to these<br/>
Would men attribute sense, because they seemed<br/>
To move their limbs and speak pronouncements high,<br/>
Befitting glorious visage and vast powers.<br/>
And men would give them an eternal life,<br/>
Because their visages forevermore<br/>
Were there before them, and their shapes remained,<br/>
And chiefly, however, because men would not think<br/>
Beings augmented with such mighty powers<br/>
Could well by any force o'ermastered be.<br/>
And men would think them in their happiness<br/>
Excelling far, because the fear of death<br/>
Vexed no one of them at all, and since<br/>
At same time in men's sleeps men saw them do<br/>
So many wonders, and yet feel therefrom<br/>
Themselves no weariness. Besides, men marked<br/>
How in a fixed order rolled around<br/>
The systems of the sky, and changed times<br/>
Of annual seasons, nor were able then<br/>
To know thereof the causes. Therefore 'twas<br/>
Men would take refuge in consigning all<br/>
Unto divinities, and in feigning all<br/>
Was guided by their nod. And in the sky<br/>
They set the seats and vaults of gods, because<br/>
Across the sky night and the moon are seen<br/>
To roll along—moon, day, and night, and night's<br/>
Old awesome constellations evermore,<br/>
And the night-wandering fireballs of the sky,<br/>
And flying flames, clouds, and the sun, the rains,<br/>
Snow and the winds, the lightnings, and the hail,<br/>
And the swift rumblings, and the hollow roar<br/>
Of mighty menacings forevermore.<br/>
<br/>
O humankind unhappy!—when it ascribed<br/>
Unto divinities such awesome deeds,<br/>
And coupled thereto rigours of fierce wrath!<br/>
What groans did men on that sad day beget<br/>
Even for themselves, and O what wounds for us,<br/>
What tears for our children's children! Nor, O man,<br/>
Is thy true piety in this: with head<br/>
Under the veil, still to be seen to turn<br/>
Fronting a stone, and ever to approach<br/>
Unto all altars; nor so prone on earth<br/>
Forward to fall, to spread upturned palms<br/>
Before the shrines of gods, nor yet to dew<br/>
Altars with profuse blood of four-foot beasts,<br/>
Nor vows with vows to link. But rather this:<br/>
To look on all things with a master eye<br/>
And mind at peace. For when we gaze aloft<br/>
Upon the skiey vaults of yon great world<br/>
And ether, fixed high o'er twinkling stars,<br/>
And into our thought there come the journeyings<br/>
Of sun and moon, O then into our breasts,<br/>
O'erburdened already with their other ills,<br/>
Begins forthwith to rear its sudden head<br/>
One more misgiving: lest o'er us, percase,<br/>
It be the gods' immeasurable power<br/>
That rolls, with varied motion, round and round<br/>
The far white constellations. For the lack<br/>
Of aught of reasons tries the puzzled mind:<br/>
Whether was ever a birth-time of the world,<br/>
And whether, likewise, any end shall be<br/>
How far the ramparts of the world can still<br/>
Outstand this strain of ever-roused motion,<br/>
Or whether, divinely with eternal weal<br/>
Endowed, they can through endless tracts of age<br/>
Glide on, defying the o'er-mighty powers<br/>
Of the immeasurable ages. Lo,<br/>
What man is there whose mind with dread of gods<br/>
Cringes not close, whose limbs with terror-spell<br/>
Crouch not together, when the parched earth<br/>
Quakes with the horrible thunderbolt amain,<br/>
And across the mighty sky the rumblings run?<br/>
Do not the peoples and the nations shake,<br/>
And haughty kings do they not hug their limbs,<br/>
Strook through with fear of the divinities,<br/>
Lest for aught foully done or madly said<br/>
The heavy time be now at hand to pay?<br/>
When, too, fierce force of fury-winds at sea<br/>
Sweepeth a navy's admiral down the main<br/>
With his stout legions and his elephants,<br/>
Doth he not seek the peace of gods with vows,<br/>
And beg in prayer, a-tremble, lulled winds<br/>
And friendly gales?—in vain, since, often up-caught<br/>
In fury-cyclones, is he borne along,<br/>
For all his mouthings, to the shoals of doom.<br/>
Ah, so irrevocably some hidden power<br/>
Betramples forevermore affairs of men,<br/>
And visibly grindeth with its heel in mire<br/>
The lictors' glorious rods and axes dire,<br/>
Having them in derision! Again, when earth<br/>
From end to end is rocking under foot,<br/>
And shaken cities ruin down, or threaten<br/>
Upon the verge, what wonder is it then<br/>
That mortal generations abase themselves,<br/>
And unto gods in all affairs of earth<br/>
Assign as last resort almighty powers<br/>
And wondrous energies to govern all?<br/>
<br/>
Now for the rest: copper and gold and iron<br/>
Discovered were, and with them silver's weight<br/>
And power of lead, when with prodigious heat<br/>
The conflagrations burned the forest trees<br/>
Among the mighty mountains, by a bolt<br/>
Of lightning from the sky, or else because<br/>
Men, warring in the woodlands, on their foes<br/>
Had hurled fire to frighten and dismay,<br/>
Or yet because, by goodness of the soil<br/>
Invited, men desired to clear rich fields<br/>
And turn the countryside to pasture-lands,<br/>
Or slay the wild and thrive upon the spoils.<br/>
(For hunting by pit-fall and by fire arose<br/>
Before the art of hedging the covert round<br/>
With net or stirring it with dogs of chase.)<br/>
Howso the fact, and from what cause soever<br/>
The flamy heat with awful crack and roar<br/>
Had there devoured to their deepest roots<br/>
The forest trees and baked the earth with fire,<br/>
Then from the boiling veins began to ooze<br/>
O rivulets of silver and of gold,<br/>
Of lead and copper too, collecting soon<br/>
Into the hollow places of the ground.<br/>
And when men saw the cooled lumps anon<br/>
To shine with splendour-sheen upon the ground,<br/>
Much taken with that lustrous smooth delight,<br/>
They 'gan to pry them out, and saw how each<br/>
Had got a shape like to its earthy mould.<br/>
Then would it enter their heads how these same lumps,<br/>
If melted by heat, could into any form<br/>
Or figure of things be run, and how, again,<br/>
If hammered out, they could be nicely drawn<br/>
To sharpest points or finest edge, and thus<br/>
Yield to the forgers tools and give them power<br/>
To chop the forest down, to hew the logs,<br/>
To shave the beams and planks, besides to bore<br/>
And punch and drill. And men began such work<br/>
At first as much with tools of silver and gold<br/>
As with the impetuous strength of the stout copper;<br/>
But vainly—since their over-mastered power<br/>
Would soon give way, unable to endure,<br/>
Like copper, such hard labour. In those days<br/>
Copper it was that was the thing of price;<br/>
And gold lay useless, blunted with dull edge.<br/>
Now lies the copper low, and gold hath come<br/>
Unto the loftiest honours. Thus it is<br/>
That rolling ages change the times of things:<br/>
What erst was of a price, becomes at last<br/>
A discard of no honour; whilst another<br/>
Succeeds to glory, issuing from contempt,<br/>
And day by day is sought for more and more,<br/>
And, when 'tis found, doth flower in men's praise,<br/>
Objects of wondrous honour.<br/>
<br/>
Now, Memmius,<br/>
How nature of iron discovered was, thou mayst<br/>
Of thine own self divine. Man's ancient arms<br/>
Were hands, and nails and teeth, stones too and boughs—<br/>
Breakage of forest trees—and flame and fire,<br/>
As soon as known. Thereafter force of iron<br/>
And copper discovered was; and copper's use<br/>
Was known ere iron's, since more tractable<br/>
Its nature is and its abundance more.<br/>
With copper men to work the soil began,<br/>
With copper to rouse the hurly waves of war,<br/>
To straw the monstrous wounds, and seize away<br/>
Another's flocks and fields. For unto them,<br/>
Thus armed, all things naked of defence<br/>
Readily yielded. Then by slow degrees<br/>
The sword of iron succeeded, and the shape<br/>
Of brazen sickle into scorn was turned:<br/>
With iron to cleave the soil of earth they 'gan,<br/>
And the contentions of uncertain war<br/>
Were rendered equal.<br/>
<br/>
And, lo, man was wont<br/>
Armed to mount upon the ribs of horse<br/>
And guide him with the rein, and play about<br/>
With right hand free, oft times before he tried<br/>
Perils of war in yoked chariot;<br/>
And yoked pairs abreast came earlier<br/>
Than yokes of four, or scythed chariots<br/>
Whereinto clomb the men-at-arms. And next<br/>
The Punic folk did train the elephants—<br/>
Those curst Lucanian oxen, hideous,<br/>
The serpent-handed, with turrets on their bulks—<br/>
To dure the wounds of war and panic-strike<br/>
The mighty troops of Mars. Thus Discord sad<br/>
Begat the one Thing after other, to be<br/>
The terror of the nations under arms,<br/>
And day by day to horrors of old war<br/>
She added an increase.<br/>
<br/>
Bulls, too, they tried<br/>
In war's grim business; and essayed to send<br/>
Outrageous boars against the foes. And some<br/>
Sent on before their ranks puissant lions<br/>
With armed trainers and with masters fierce<br/>
To guide and hold in chains—and yet in vain,<br/>
Since fleshed with pell-mell slaughter, fierce they flew,<br/>
And blindly through the squadrons havoc wrought,<br/>
Shaking the frightful crests upon their heads,<br/>
Now here, now there. Nor could the horsemen calm<br/>
Their horses, panic-breasted at the roar,<br/>
And rein them round to front the foe. With spring<br/>
The infuriate she-lions would up-leap<br/>
Now here, now there; and whoso came apace<br/>
Against them, these they'd rend across the face;<br/>
And others unwitting from behind they'd tear<br/>
Down from their mounts, and twining round them, bring<br/>
Tumbling to earth, o'ermastered by the wound,<br/>
And with those powerful fangs and hooked claws<br/>
Fasten upon them. Bulls would toss their friends,<br/>
And trample under foot, and from beneath<br/>
Rip flanks and bellies of horses with their horns,<br/>
And with a threat'ning forehead jam the sod;<br/>
And boars would gore with stout tusks their allies,<br/>
Splashing in fury their own blood on spears<br/>
Splintered in their own bodies, and would fell<br/>
In rout and ruin infantry and horse.<br/>
For there the beasts-of-saddle tried to scape<br/>
The savage thrusts of tusk by shying off,<br/>
Or rearing up with hoofs a-paw in air.<br/>
In vain—since there thou mightest see them sink,<br/>
Their sinews severed, and with heavy fall<br/>
Bestrew the ground. And such of these as men<br/>
Supposed well-trained long ago at home,<br/>
Were in the thick of action seen to foam<br/>
In fury, from the wounds, the shrieks, the flight,<br/>
The panic, and the tumult; nor could men<br/>
Aught of their numbers rally. For each breed<br/>
And various of the wild beasts fled apart<br/>
Hither or thither, as often in wars to-day<br/>
Flee those Lucanian oxen, by the steel<br/>
Grievously mangled, after they have wrought<br/>
Upon their friends so many a dreadful doom.<br/>
(If 'twas, indeed, that thus they did at all:<br/>
But scarcely I'll believe that men could not<br/>
With mind foreknow and see, as sure to come,<br/>
Such foul and general disaster.—This<br/>
We, then, may hold as true in the great All,<br/>
In divers worlds on divers plan create,—<br/>
Somewhere afar more likely than upon<br/>
One certain earth.) But men chose this to do<br/>
Less in the hope of conquering than to give<br/>
Their enemies a goodly cause of woe,<br/>
Even though thereby they perished themselves,<br/>
Since weak in numbers and since wanting arms.<br/>
<br/>
Now, clothes of roughly inter-plaited strands<br/>
Were earlier than loom-wove coverings;<br/>
The loom-wove later than man's iron is,<br/>
Since iron is needful in the weaving art,<br/>
Nor by no other means can there be wrought<br/>
Such polished tools—the treadles, spindles, shuttles,<br/>
And sounding yarn-beams. And nature forced the men,<br/>
Before the woman kind, to work the wool:<br/>
For all the male kind far excels in skill,<br/>
And cleverer is by much—until at last<br/>
The rugged farmer folk jeered at such tasks,<br/>
And so were eager soon to give them o'er<br/>
To women's hands, and in more hardy toil<br/>
To harden arms and hands.<br/>
<br/>
But nature herself,<br/>
Mother of things, was the first seed-sower<br/>
And primal grafter; since the berries and acorns,<br/>
Dropping from off the trees, would there beneath<br/>
Put forth in season swarms of little shoots;<br/>
Hence too men's fondness for ingrafting slips<br/>
Upon the boughs and setting out in holes<br/>
The young shrubs o'er the fields. Then would they try<br/>
Ever new modes of tilling their loved crofts,<br/>
And mark they would how earth improved the taste<br/>
Of the wild fruits by fond and fostering care.<br/>
And day by day they'd force the woods to move<br/>
Still higher up the mountain, and to yield<br/>
The place below for tilth, that there they might,<br/>
On plains and uplands, have their meadow-plats,<br/>
Cisterns and runnels, crops of standing grain,<br/>
And happy vineyards, and that all along<br/>
O'er hillocks, intervales, and plains might run<br/>
The silvery-green belt of olive-trees,<br/>
Marking the plotted landscape; even as now<br/>
Thou seest so marked with varied loveliness<br/>
All the terrain which men adorn and plant<br/>
With rows of goodly fruit-trees and hedge round<br/>
With thriving shrubberies sown.<br/>
<br/>
But by the mouth<br/>
To imitate the liquid notes of birds<br/>
Was earlier far 'mongst men than power to make,<br/>
By measured song, melodious verse and give<br/>
Delight to ears. And whistlings of the wind<br/>
Athrough the hollows of the reeds first taught<br/>
The peasantry to blow into the stalks<br/>
Of hollow hemlock-herb. Then bit by bit<br/>
They learned sweet plainings, such as pipe out-pours,<br/>
Beaten by finger-tips of singing men,<br/>
When heard through unpathed groves and forest deeps<br/>
And woodsy meadows, through the untrod haunts<br/>
Of shepherd folk and spots divinely still.<br/>
Thus time draws forward each and everything<br/>
Little by little unto the midst of men,<br/>
And reason uplifts it to the shores of light.<br/>
These tunes would soothe and glad the minds of mortals<br/>
When sated with food,—for songs are welcome then.<br/>
And often, lounging with friends in the soft grass<br/>
Beside a river of water, underneath<br/>
A big tree's branches, merrily they'd refresh<br/>
Their frames, with no vast outlay—most of all<br/>
If the weather were smiling and the times of the year<br/>
Were painting the green of the grass around with flowers.<br/>
Then jokes, then talk, then peals of jollity<br/>
Would circle round; for then the rustic muse<br/>
Was in her glory; then would antic Mirth<br/>
Prompt them to garland head and shoulders about<br/>
With chaplets of intertwined flowers and leaves,<br/>
And to dance onward, out of tune, with limbs<br/>
Clownishly swaying, and with clownish foot<br/>
To beat our mother earth—from whence arose<br/>
Laughter and peals of jollity, for, lo,<br/>
Such frolic acts were in their glory then,<br/>
Being more new and strange. And wakeful men<br/>
Found solaces for their unsleeping hours<br/>
In drawing forth variety of notes,<br/>
In modulating melodies, in running<br/>
With puckered lips along the tuned reeds,<br/>
Whence, even in our day do the watchmen guard<br/>
These old traditions, and have learned well<br/>
To keep true measure. And yet they no whit<br/>
Do get a larger fruit of gladsomeness<br/>
Than got the woodland aborigines<br/>
In olden times. For what we have at hand—<br/>
If theretofore naught sweeter we have known—<br/>
That chiefly pleases and seems best of all;<br/>
But then some later, likely better, find<br/>
Destroys its worth and changes our desires<br/>
Regarding good of yesterday.<br/>
<br/>
And thus<br/>
Began the loathing of the acorn; thus<br/>
Abandoned were those beds with grasses strewn<br/>
And with the leaves beladen. Thus, again,<br/>
Fell into new contempt the pelts of beasts—<br/>
Erstwhile a robe of honour, which, I guess,<br/>
Aroused in those days envy so malign<br/>
That the first wearer went to woeful death<br/>
By ambuscades,—and yet that hairy prize,<br/>
Rent into rags by greedy foemen there<br/>
And splashed by blood, was ruined utterly<br/>
Beyond all use or vantage. Thus of old<br/>
'Twas pelts, and of to-day 'tis purple and gold<br/>
That cark men's lives with cares and weary with war.<br/>
Wherefore, methinks, resides the greater blame<br/>
With us vain men to-day: for cold would rack,<br/>
Without their pelts, the naked sons of earth;<br/>
But us it nothing hurts to do without<br/>
The purple vestment, broidered with gold<br/>
And with imposing figures, if we still<br/>
Make shift with some mean garment of the Plebs.<br/>
So man in vain futilities toils on<br/>
Forever and wastes in idle cares his years—<br/>
Because, of very truth, he hath not learnt<br/>
What the true end of getting is, nor yet<br/>
At all how far true pleasure may increase.<br/>
And 'tis desire for better and for more<br/>
Hath carried by degrees mortality<br/>
Out onward to the deep, and roused up<br/>
From the far bottom mighty waves of war.<br/>
<br/>
But sun and moon, those watchmen of the world,<br/>
With their own lanterns traversing around<br/>
The mighty, the revolving vault, have taught<br/>
Unto mankind that seasons of the years<br/>
Return again, and that the Thing takes place<br/>
After a fixed plan and order fixed.<br/>
<br/>
Already would they pass their life, hedged round<br/>
By the strong towers; and cultivate an earth<br/>
All portioned out and boundaried; already<br/>
Would the sea flower and sail-winged ships;<br/>
Already men had, under treaty pacts,<br/>
Confederates and allies, when poets began<br/>
To hand heroic actions down in verse;<br/>
Nor long ere this had letters been devised—<br/>
Hence is our age unable to look back<br/>
On what has gone before, except where reason<br/>
Shows us a footprint.<br/>
<br/>
Sailings on the seas,<br/>
Tillings of fields, walls, laws, and arms, and roads,<br/>
Dress and the like, all prizes, all delights<br/>
Of finer life, poems, pictures, chiselled shapes<br/>
Of polished sculptures—all these arts were learned<br/>
By practice and the mind's experience,<br/>
As men walked forward step by eager step.<br/>
Thus time draws forward each and everything<br/>
Little by little into the midst of men,<br/>
And reason uplifts it to the shores of light.<br/>
For one thing after other did men see<br/>
Grow clear by intellect, till with their arts<br/>
They've now achieved the supreme pinnacle.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> BOOK VI </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> PROEM </h2>
<p>'Twas Athens first, the glorious in name,<br/>
That whilom gave to hapless sons of men<br/>
The sheaves of harvest, and re-ordered life,<br/>
And decreed laws; and she the first that gave<br/>
Life its sweet solaces, when she begat<br/>
A man of heart so wise, who whilom poured<br/>
All wisdom forth from his truth-speaking mouth;<br/>
The glory of whom, though dead, is yet to-day,<br/>
Because of those discoveries divine<br/>
Renowned of old, exalted to the sky.<br/>
For when saw he that well-nigh everything<br/>
Which needs of man most urgently require<br/>
Was ready to hand for mortals, and that life,<br/>
As far as might be, was established safe,<br/>
That men were lords in riches, honour, praise,<br/>
And eminent in goodly fame of sons,<br/>
And that they yet, O yet, within the home,<br/>
Still had the anxious heart which vexed life<br/>
Unpausingly with torments of the mind,<br/>
And raved perforce with angry plaints, then he,<br/>
Then he, the master, did perceive that 'twas<br/>
The vessel itself which worked the bane, and all,<br/>
However wholesome, which from here or there<br/>
Was gathered into it, was by that bane<br/>
Spoilt from within,—in part, because he saw<br/>
The vessel so cracked and leaky that nowise<br/>
'T could ever be filled to brim; in part because<br/>
He marked how it polluted with foul taste<br/>
Whate'er it got within itself. So he,<br/>
The master, then by his truth-speaking words,<br/>
Purged the breasts of men, and set the bounds<br/>
Of lust and terror, and exhibited<br/>
The supreme good whither we all endeavour,<br/>
And showed the path whereby we might arrive<br/>
Thereunto by a little cross-cut straight,<br/>
And what of ills in all affairs of mortals<br/>
Upsprang and flitted deviously about<br/>
(Whether by chance or force), since nature thus<br/>
Had destined; and from out what gates a man<br/>
Should sally to each combat. And he proved<br/>
That mostly vainly doth the human race<br/>
Roll in its bosom the grim waves of care.<br/>
For just as children tremble and fear all<br/>
In the viewless dark, so even we at times<br/>
Dread in the light so many things that be<br/>
No whit more fearsome than what children feign,<br/>
Shuddering, will be upon them in the dark.<br/>
This terror then, this darkness of the mind,<br/>
Not sunrise with its flaring spokes of light,<br/>
Nor glittering arrows of morning can disperse,<br/>
But only nature's aspect and her law.<br/>
Wherefore the more will I go on to weave<br/>
In verses this my undertaken task.<br/>
<br/>
And since I've taught thee that the world's great vaults<br/>
Are mortal and that sky is fashioned<br/>
Of frame e'en born in time, and whatsoe'er<br/>
Therein go on and must perforce go on<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>The most I have unravelled; what remains<br/>
Do thou take in, besides; since once for all<br/>
To climb into that chariot' renowned<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Of winds arise; and they appeased are<br/>
So that all things again...<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Which were, are changed now, with fury stilled;<br/>
All other movements through the earth and sky<br/>
Which mortals gaze upon (O anxious oft<br/>
In quaking thoughts!), and which abase their minds<br/>
With dread of deities and press them crushed<br/>
Down to the earth, because their ignorance<br/>
Of cosmic causes forces them to yield<br/>
All things unto the empery of gods<br/>
And to concede the kingly rule to them.<br/>
For even those men who have learned full well<br/>
That godheads lead a long life free of care,<br/>
If yet meanwhile they wonder by what plan<br/>
Things can go on (and chiefly yon high things<br/>
Observed o'erhead on the ethereal coasts),<br/>
Again are hurried back unto the fears<br/>
Of old religion and adopt again<br/>
Harsh masters, deemed almighty,—wretched men,<br/>
Unwitting what can be and what cannot,<br/>
And by what law to each its scope prescribed,<br/>
Its boundary stone that clings so deep in Time.<br/>
Wherefore the more are they borne wandering on<br/>
By blindfold reason. And, Memmius, unless<br/>
From out thy mind thou spuest all of this<br/>
And casteth far from thee all thoughts which be<br/>
Unworthy gods and alien to their peace,<br/>
Then often will the holy majesties<br/>
Of the high gods be harmful unto thee,<br/>
As by thy thought degraded,—not, indeed,<br/>
That essence supreme of gods could be by this<br/>
So outraged as in wrath to thirst to seek<br/>
Revenges keen; but even because thyself<br/>
Thou plaguest with the notion that the gods,<br/>
Even they, the Calm Ones in serene repose,<br/>
Do roll the mighty waves of wrath on wrath;<br/>
Nor wilt thou enter with a serene breast<br/>
Shrines of the gods; nor wilt thou able be<br/>
In tranquil peace of mind to take and know<br/>
Those images which from their holy bodies<br/>
Are carried into intellects of men,<br/>
As the announcers of their form divine.<br/>
What sort of life will follow after this<br/>
'Tis thine to see. But that afar from us<br/>
Veriest reason may drive such life away,<br/>
Much yet remains to be embellished yet<br/>
In polished verses, albeit hath issued forth<br/>
So much from me already; lo, there is<br/>
The law and aspect of the sky to be<br/>
By reason grasped; there are the tempest times<br/>
And the bright lightnings to be hymned now—<br/>
Even what they do and from what cause soe'er<br/>
They're borne along—that thou mayst tremble not,<br/>
Marking off regions of prophetic skies<br/>
For auguries, O foolishly distraught<br/>
Even as to whence the flying flame hath come,<br/>
Or to which half of heaven it turns, or how<br/>
Through walled places it hath wound its way,<br/>
Or, after proving its dominion there,<br/>
How it hath speeded forth from thence amain—<br/>
Whereof nowise the causes do men know,<br/>
And think divinities are working there.<br/>
Do thou, Calliope, ingenious Muse,<br/>
Solace of mortals and delight of gods,<br/>
Point out the course before me, as I race<br/>
On to the white line of the utmost goal,<br/>
That I may get with signal praise the crown,<br/>
With thee my guide!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> GREAT METEOROLOGICAL PHENOMENA, ETC. </h2>
<p>And so in first place, then,<br/>
With thunder are shaken the blue deeps of heaven,<br/>
Because the ethereal clouds, scudding aloft,<br/>
Together clash, what time 'gainst one another<br/>
The winds are battling. For never a sound there comes<br/>
From out the serene regions of the sky;<br/>
But wheresoever in a host more dense<br/>
The clouds foregather, thence more often comes<br/>
A crash with mighty rumbling. And, again,<br/>
Clouds cannot be of so condensed a frame<br/>
As stones and timbers, nor again so fine<br/>
As mists and flying smoke; for then perforce<br/>
They'd either fall, borne down by their brute weight,<br/>
Like stones, or, like the smoke, they'd powerless be<br/>
To keep their mass, or to retain within<br/>
Frore snows and storms of hail. And they give forth<br/>
O'er skiey levels of the spreading world<br/>
A sound on high, as linen-awning, stretched<br/>
O'er mighty theatres, gives forth at times<br/>
A cracking roar, when much 'tis beaten about<br/>
Betwixt the poles and cross-beams. Sometimes, too,<br/>
Asunder rent by wanton gusts, it raves<br/>
And imitates the tearing sound of sheets<br/>
Of paper—even this kind of noise thou mayst<br/>
In thunder hear—or sound as when winds whirl<br/>
With lashings and do buffet about in air<br/>
A hanging cloth and flying paper-sheets.<br/>
For sometimes, too, it chances that the clouds<br/>
Cannot together crash head-on, but rather<br/>
Move side-wise and with motions contrary<br/>
Graze each the other's body without speed,<br/>
From whence that dry sound grateth on our ears,<br/>
So long drawn-out, until the clouds have passed<br/>
From out their close positions.<br/>
<br/>
And, again,<br/>
In following wise all things seem oft to quake<br/>
At shock of heavy thunder, and mightiest walls<br/>
Of the wide reaches of the upper world<br/>
There on the instant to have sprung apart,<br/>
Riven asunder, what time a gathered blast<br/>
Of the fierce hurricane hath all at once<br/>
Twisted its way into a mass of clouds,<br/>
And, there enclosed, ever more and more<br/>
Compelleth by its spinning whirl the cloud<br/>
To grow all hollow with a thickened crust<br/>
Surrounding; for thereafter, when the force<br/>
And the keen onset of the wind have weakened<br/>
That crust, lo, then the cloud, to-split in twain,<br/>
Gives forth a hideous crash with bang and boom.<br/>
No marvel this; since oft a bladder small,<br/>
Filled up with air, will, when of sudden burst,<br/>
Give forth a like large sound.<br/>
<br/>
There's reason, too,<br/>
Why clouds make sounds, as through them blow the winds:<br/>
We see, borne down the sky, oft shapes of clouds<br/>
Rough-edged or branched many forky ways;<br/>
And 'tis the same, as when the sudden flaws<br/>
Of north-west wind through the dense forest blow,<br/>
Making the leaves to sough and limbs to crash.<br/>
It happens too at times that roused force<br/>
Of the fierce hurricane to-rends the cloud,<br/>
Breaking right through it by a front assault;<br/>
For what a blast of wind may do up there<br/>
Is manifest from facts when here on earth<br/>
A blast more gentle yet uptwists tall trees<br/>
And sucks them madly from their deepest roots.<br/>
Besides, among the clouds are waves, and these<br/>
Give, as they roughly break, a rumbling roar;<br/>
As when along deep streams or the great sea<br/>
Breaks the loud surf. It happens, too, whenever<br/>
Out from one cloud into another falls<br/>
The fiery energy of thunderbolt,<br/>
That straightaway the cloud, if full of wet,<br/>
Extinguishes the fire with mighty noise;<br/>
As iron, white from the hot furnaces,<br/>
Sizzles, when speedily we've plunged its glow<br/>
Down the cold water. Further, if a cloud<br/>
More dry receive the fire, 'twill suddenly<br/>
Kindle to flame and burn with monstrous sound,<br/>
As if a flame with whirl of winds should range<br/>
Along the laurel-tressed mountains far,<br/>
Upburning with its vast assault those trees;<br/>
Nor is there aught that in the crackling flame<br/>
Consumes with sound more terrible to man<br/>
Than Delphic laurel of Apollo lord.<br/>
Oft, too, the multitudinous crash of ice<br/>
And down-pour of swift hail gives forth a sound<br/>
Among the mighty clouds on high; for when<br/>
The wind hath packed them close, each mountain mass<br/>
Of rain-cloud, there congealed utterly<br/>
And mixed with hail-stones, breaks and booms...<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Likewise, it lightens, when the clouds have struck,<br/>
By their collision, forth the seeds of fire:<br/>
As if a stone should smite a stone or steel,<br/>
For light then too leaps forth and fire then scatters<br/>
The shining sparks. But with our ears we get<br/>
The thunder after eyes behold the flash,<br/>
Because forever things arrive the ears<br/>
More tardily than the eyes—as thou mayst see<br/>
From this example too: when markest thou<br/>
Some man far yonder felling a great tree<br/>
With double-edged ax, it comes to pass<br/>
Thine eye beholds the swinging stroke before<br/>
The blow gives forth a sound athrough thine ears:<br/>
Thus also we behold the flashing ere<br/>
We hear the thunder, which discharged is<br/>
At same time with the fire and by same cause,<br/>
Born of the same collision.<br/>
<br/>
In following wise<br/>
The clouds suffuse with leaping light the lands,<br/>
And the storm flashes with tremulous elan:<br/>
When the wind hath invaded a cloud, and, whirling there,<br/>
Hath wrought (as I have shown above) the cloud<br/>
Into a hollow with a thickened crust,<br/>
It becomes hot of own velocity:<br/>
Just as thou seest how motion will o'erheat<br/>
And set ablaze all objects,—verily<br/>
A leaden ball, hurtling through length of space,<br/>
Even melts. Therefore, when this same wind a-fire<br/>
Hath split black cloud, it scatters the fire-seeds,<br/>
Which, so to say, have been pressed out by force<br/>
Of sudden from the cloud;—and these do make<br/>
The pulsing flashes of flame; thence followeth<br/>
The detonation which attacks our ears<br/>
More tardily than aught which comes along<br/>
Unto the sight of eyeballs. This takes place—<br/>
As know thou mayst—at times when clouds are dense<br/>
And one upon the other piled aloft<br/>
With wonderful upheavings—nor be thou<br/>
Deceived because we see how broad their base<br/>
From underneath, and not how high they tower.<br/>
For make thine observations at a time<br/>
When winds shall bear athwart the horizon's blue<br/>
Clouds like to mountain-ranges moving on,<br/>
Or when about the sides of mighty peaks<br/>
Thou seest them one upon the other massed<br/>
And burdening downward, anchored in high repose,<br/>
With the winds sepulchred on all sides round:<br/>
Then canst thou know their mighty masses, then<br/>
Canst view their caverns, as if builded there<br/>
Of beetling crags; which, when the hurricanes<br/>
In gathered storm have filled utterly,<br/>
Then, prisoned in clouds, they rave around<br/>
With mighty roarings, and within those dens<br/>
Bluster like savage beasts, and now from here,<br/>
And now from there, send growlings through the clouds,<br/>
And seeking an outlet, whirl themselves about,<br/>
And roll from 'mid the clouds the seeds of fire,<br/>
And heap them multitudinously there,<br/>
And in the hollow furnaces within<br/>
Wheel flame around, until from bursted cloud<br/>
In forky flashes they have gleamed forth.<br/>
<br/>
Again, from following cause it comes to pass<br/>
That yon swift golden hue of liquid fire<br/>
Darts downward to the earth: because the clouds<br/>
Themselves must hold abundant seeds of fire;<br/>
For, when they be without all moisture, then<br/>
They be for most part of a flamy hue<br/>
And a resplendent. And, indeed, they must<br/>
Even from the light of sun unto themselves<br/>
Take multitudinous seeds, and so perforce<br/>
Redden and pour their bright fires all abroad.<br/>
And therefore, when the wind hath driven and thrust,<br/>
Hath forced and squeezed into one spot these clouds,<br/>
They pour abroad the seeds of fire pressed out,<br/>
Which make to flash these colours of the flame.<br/>
Likewise, it lightens also when the clouds<br/>
Grow rare and thin along the sky; for, when<br/>
The wind with gentle touch unravels them<br/>
And breaketh asunder as they move, those seeds<br/>
Which make the lightnings must by nature fall;<br/>
At such an hour the horizon lightens round<br/>
Without the hideous terror of dread noise<br/>
And skiey uproar.<br/>
<br/>
To proceed apace,<br/>
What sort of nature thunderbolts possess<br/>
Is by their strokes made manifest and by<br/>
The brand-marks of their searing heat on things,<br/>
And by the scorched scars exhaling round<br/>
The heavy fumes of sulphur. For all these<br/>
Are marks, O not of wind or rain, but fire.<br/>
Again, they often enkindle even the roofs<br/>
Of houses and inside the very rooms<br/>
With swift flame hold a fierce dominion.<br/>
Know thou that nature fashioned this fire<br/>
Subtler than fires all other, with minute<br/>
And dartling bodies,—a fire 'gainst which there's naught<br/>
Can in the least hold out: the thunderbolt,<br/>
The mighty, passes through the hedging walls<br/>
Of houses, like to voices or a shout,—<br/>
Through stones, through bronze it passes, and it melts<br/>
Upon the instant bronze and gold; and makes,<br/>
Likewise, the wines sudden to vanish forth,<br/>
The wine-jars intact,—because, ye see,<br/>
Its heat arriving renders loose and porous<br/>
Readily all the wine—jar's earthen sides,<br/>
And winding its way within, it scattereth<br/>
The elements primordial of the wine<br/>
With speedy dissolution—process which<br/>
Even in an age the fiery steam of sun<br/>
Could not accomplish, however puissant he<br/>
With his hot coruscations: so much more<br/>
Agile and overpowering is this force.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Now in what manner engendered are these things,<br/>
How fashioned of such impetuous strength<br/>
As to cleave towers asunder, and houses all<br/>
To overtopple, and to wrench apart<br/>
Timbers and beams, and heroes' monuments<br/>
To pile in ruins and upheave amain,<br/>
And to take breath forever out of men,<br/>
And to o'erthrow the cattle everywhere,—<br/>
Yes, by what force the lightnings do all this,<br/>
All this and more, I will unfold to thee,<br/>
Nor longer keep thee in mere promises.<br/>
<br/>
The bolts of thunder, then, must be conceived<br/>
As all begotten in those crasser clouds<br/>
Up-piled aloft; for, from the sky serene<br/>
And from the clouds of lighter density,<br/>
None are sent forth forever. That 'tis so<br/>
Beyond a doubt, fact plain to sense declares:<br/>
To wit, at such a time the densed clouds<br/>
So mass themselves through all the upper air<br/>
That we might think that round about all murk<br/>
Had parted forth from Acheron and filled<br/>
The mighty vaults of sky—so grievously,<br/>
As gathers thus the storm-clouds' gruesome might,<br/>
Do faces of black horror hang on high—<br/>
When tempest begins its thunderbolts to forge.<br/>
Besides, full often also out at sea<br/>
A blackest thunderhead, like cataract<br/>
Of pitch hurled down from heaven, and far away<br/>
Bulging with murkiness, down on the waves<br/>
Falls with vast uproar, and draws on amain<br/>
The darkling tempests big with thunderbolts<br/>
And hurricanes, itself the while so crammed<br/>
Tremendously with fires and winds, that even<br/>
Back on the lands the people shudder round<br/>
And seek for cover. Therefore, as I said,<br/>
The storm must be conceived as o'er our head<br/>
Towering most high; for never would the clouds<br/>
O'erwhelm the lands with such a massy dark,<br/>
Unless up-builded heap on lofty heap,<br/>
To shut the round sun off. Nor could the clouds,<br/>
As on they come, engulf with rain so vast<br/>
As thus to make the rivers overflow<br/>
And fields to float, if ether were not thus<br/>
Furnished with lofty-piled clouds. Lo, then,<br/>
Here be all things fulfilled with winds and fires—<br/>
Hence the long lightnings and the thunders loud.<br/>
For, verily, I've taught thee even now<br/>
How cavernous clouds hold seeds innumerable<br/>
Of fiery exhalations, and they must<br/>
From off the sunbeams and the heat of these<br/>
Take many still. And so, when that same wind<br/>
(Which, haply, into one region of the sky<br/>
Collects those clouds) hath pressed from out the same<br/>
The many fiery seeds, and with that fire<br/>
Hath at the same time inter-mixed itself,<br/>
O then and there that wind, a whirlwind now,<br/>
Deep in the belly of the cloud spins round<br/>
In narrow confines, and sharpens there inside<br/>
In glowing furnaces the thunderbolt.<br/>
For in a two-fold manner is that wind<br/>
Enkindled all: it trembles into heat<br/>
Both by its own velocity and by<br/>
Repeated touch of fire. Thereafter, when<br/>
The energy of wind is heated through<br/>
And the fierce impulse of the fire hath sped<br/>
Deeply within, O then the thunderbolt,<br/>
Now ripened, so to say, doth suddenly<br/>
Splinter the cloud, and the aroused flash<br/>
Leaps onward, lumining with forky light<br/>
All places round. And followeth anon<br/>
A clap so heavy that the skiey vaults,<br/>
As if asunder burst, seem from on high<br/>
To engulf the earth. Then fearfully a quake<br/>
Pervades the lands, and 'long the lofty skies<br/>
Run the far rumblings. For at such a time<br/>
Nigh the whole tempest quakes, shook through and through,<br/>
And roused are the roarings,—from which shock<br/>
Comes such resounding and abounding rain,<br/>
That all the murky ether seems to turn<br/>
Now into rain, and, as it tumbles down,<br/>
To summon the fields back to primeval floods:<br/>
So big the rains that be sent down on men<br/>
By burst of cloud and by the hurricane,<br/>
What time the thunder-clap, from burning bolt<br/>
That cracks the cloud, flies forth along. At times<br/>
The force of wind, excited from without,<br/>
Smiteth into a cloud already hot<br/>
With a ripe thunderbolt. And when that wind<br/>
Hath splintered that cloud, then down there cleaves forthwith<br/>
Yon fiery coil of flame which still we call,<br/>
Even with our fathers' word, a thunderbolt.<br/>
The same thing haps toward every other side<br/>
Whither that force hath swept. It happens, too,<br/>
That sometimes force of wind, though hurtled forth<br/>
Without all fire, yet in its voyage through space<br/>
Igniteth, whilst it comes along, along,—<br/>
Losing some larger bodies which cannot<br/>
Pass, like the others, through the bulks of air,—<br/>
And, scraping together out of air itself<br/>
Some smaller bodies, carries them along,<br/>
And these, commingling, by their flight make fire:<br/>
Much in the manner as oft a leaden ball<br/>
Grows hot upon its aery course, the while<br/>
It loseth many bodies of stark cold<br/>
And taketh into itself along the air<br/>
New particles of fire. It happens, too,<br/>
That force of blow itself arouses fire,<br/>
When force of wind, a-cold and hurtled forth<br/>
Without all fire, hath strook somewhere amain—<br/>
No marvel, because, when with terrific stroke<br/>
'Thas smitten, the elements of fiery-stuff<br/>
Can stream together from out the very wind<br/>
And, simultaneously, from out that thing<br/>
Which then and there receives the stroke: as flies<br/>
The fire when with the steel we hack the stone;<br/>
Nor yet, because the force of steel's a-cold,<br/>
Rush the less speedily together there<br/>
Under the stroke its seeds of radiance hot.<br/>
And therefore, thuswise must an object too<br/>
Be kindled by a thunderbolt, if haply<br/>
'Thas been adapt and suited to the flames.<br/>
Yet force of wind must not be rashly deemed<br/>
As altogether and entirely cold—<br/>
That force which is discharged from on high<br/>
With such stupendous power; but if 'tis not<br/>
Upon its course already kindled with fire,<br/>
It yet arriveth warmed and mixed with heat.<br/>
<br/>
And, now, the speed and stroke of thunderbolt<br/>
Is so tremendous, and with glide so swift<br/>
Those thunderbolts rush on and down, because<br/>
Their roused force itself collects itself<br/>
First always in the clouds, and then prepares<br/>
For the huge effort of their going-forth;<br/>
Next, when the cloud no longer can retain<br/>
The increment of their fierce impetus,<br/>
Their force is pressed out, and therefore flies<br/>
With impetus so wondrous, like to shots<br/>
Hurled from the powerful Roman catapults.<br/>
Note, too, this force consists of elements<br/>
Both small and smooth, nor is there aught that can<br/>
With ease resist such nature. For it darts<br/>
Between and enters through the pores of things;<br/>
And so it never falters in delay<br/>
Despite innumerable collisions, but<br/>
Flies shooting onward with a swift elan.<br/>
Next, since by nature always every weight<br/>
Bears downward, doubled is the swiftness then<br/>
And that elan is still more wild and dread,<br/>
When, verily, to weight are added blows,<br/>
So that more madly and more fiercely then<br/>
The thunderbolt shakes into shivers all<br/>
That blocks its path, following on its way.<br/>
Then, too, because it comes along, along<br/>
With one continuing elan, it must<br/>
Take on velocity anew, anew,<br/>
Which still increases as it goes, and ever<br/>
Augments the bolt's vast powers and to the blow<br/>
Gives larger vigour; for it forces all,<br/>
All of the thunder's seeds of fire, to sweep<br/>
In a straight line unto one place, as 'twere,—<br/>
Casting them one by other, as they roll,<br/>
Into that onward course. Again, perchance,<br/>
In coming along, it pulls from out the air<br/>
Some certain bodies, which by their own blows<br/>
Enkindle its velocity. And, lo,<br/>
It comes through objects leaving them unharmed,<br/>
It goes through many things and leaves them whole,<br/>
Because the liquid fire flieth along<br/>
Athrough their pores. And much it does transfix,<br/>
When these primordial atoms of the bolt<br/>
Have fallen upon the atoms of these things<br/>
Precisely where the intertwined atoms<br/>
Are held together. And, further, easily<br/>
Brass it unbinds and quickly fuseth gold,<br/>
Because its force is so minutely made<br/>
Of tiny parts and elements so smooth<br/>
That easily they wind their way within,<br/>
And, when once in, quickly unbind all knots<br/>
And loosen all the bonds of union there.<br/>
<br/>
And most in autumn is shaken the house of heaven,<br/>
The house so studded with the glittering stars,<br/>
And the whole earth around—most too in spring<br/>
When flowery times unfold themselves: for, lo,<br/>
In the cold season is there lack of fire,<br/>
And winds are scanty in the hot, and clouds<br/>
Have not so dense a bulk. But when, indeed,<br/>
The seasons of heaven are betwixt these twain,<br/>
The divers causes of the thunderbolt<br/>
Then all concur; for then both cold and heat<br/>
Are mixed in the cross-seas of the year,<br/>
So that a discord rises among things<br/>
And air in vast tumultuosity<br/>
Billows, infuriate with the fires and winds—<br/>
Of which the both are needed by the cloud<br/>
For fabrication of the thunderbolt.<br/>
For the first part of heat and last of cold<br/>
Is the time of spring; wherefore must things unlike<br/>
Do battle one with other, and, when mixed,<br/>
Tumultuously rage. And when rolls round<br/>
The latest heat mixed with the earliest chill—<br/>
The time which bears the name of autumn—then<br/>
Likewise fierce cold-spells wrestle with fierce heats.<br/>
On this account these seasons of the year<br/>
Are nominated "cross-seas."—And no marvel<br/>
If in those times the thunderbolts prevail<br/>
And storms are roused turbulent in heaven,<br/>
Since then both sides in dubious warfare rage<br/>
Tumultuously, the one with flames, the other<br/>
With winds and with waters mixed with winds.<br/>
<br/>
This, this it is, O Memmius, to see through<br/>
The very nature of fire-fraught thunderbolt;<br/>
O this it is to mark by what blind force<br/>
It maketh each effect, and not, O not<br/>
To unwind Etrurian scrolls oracular,<br/>
Inquiring tokens of occult will of gods,<br/>
Even as to whence the flying flame hath come,<br/>
Or to which half of heaven it turns, or how<br/>
Through walled places it hath wound its way,<br/>
Or, after proving its dominion there,<br/>
How it hath speeded forth from thence amain,<br/>
Or what the thunderstroke portends of ill<br/>
From out high heaven. But if Jupiter<br/>
And other gods shake those refulgent vaults<br/>
With dread reverberations and hurl fire<br/>
Whither it pleases each, why smite they not<br/>
Mortals of reckless and revolting crimes,<br/>
That such may pant from a transpierced breast<br/>
Forth flames of the red levin—unto men<br/>
A drastic lesson?—why is rather he—<br/>
O he self-conscious of no foul offence—<br/>
Involved in flames, though innocent, and clasped<br/>
Up-caught in skiey whirlwind and in fire?<br/>
Nay, why, then, aim they at eternal wastes,<br/>
And spend themselves in vain?—perchance, even so<br/>
To exercise their arms and strengthen shoulders?<br/>
Why suffer they the Father's javelin<br/>
To be so blunted on the earth? And why<br/>
Doth he himself allow it, nor spare the same<br/>
Even for his enemies? O why most oft<br/>
Aims he at lofty places? Why behold we<br/>
Marks of his lightnings most on mountain tops?<br/>
Then for what reason shoots he at the sea?—<br/>
What sacrilege have waves and bulk of brine<br/>
And floating fields of foam been guilty of?<br/>
Besides, if 'tis his will that we beware<br/>
Against the lightning-stroke, why feareth he<br/>
To grant us power for to behold the shot?<br/>
And, contrariwise, if wills he to o'erwhelm us,<br/>
Quite off our guard, with fire, why thunders he<br/>
Off in yon quarter, so that we may shun?<br/>
Why rouseth he beforehand darkling air<br/>
And the far din and rumblings? And O how<br/>
Canst thou believe he shoots at one same time<br/>
Into diverse directions? Or darest thou<br/>
Contend that never hath it come to pass<br/>
That divers strokes have happened at one time?<br/>
But oft and often hath it come to pass,<br/>
And often still it must, that, even as showers<br/>
And rains o'er many regions fall, so too<br/>
Dart many thunderbolts at one same time.<br/>
Again, why never hurtles Jupiter<br/>
A bolt upon the lands nor pours abroad<br/>
Clap upon clap, when skies are cloudless all?<br/>
Or, say, doth he, so soon as ever the clouds<br/>
Have come thereunder, then into the same<br/>
Descend in person, that from thence he may<br/>
Near-by decide upon the stroke of shaft?<br/>
And, lastly, why, with devastating bolt<br/>
Shakes he asunder holy shrines of gods<br/>
And his own thrones of splendour, and to-breaks<br/>
The well-wrought idols of divinities,<br/>
And robs of glory his own images<br/>
By wound of violence?<br/>
<br/>
But to return apace,<br/>
Easy it is from these same facts to know<br/>
In just what wise those things (which from their sort<br/>
The Greeks have named "bellows") do come down,<br/>
Discharged from on high, upon the seas.<br/>
For it haps that sometimes from the sky descends<br/>
Upon the seas a column, as if pushed,<br/>
Round which the surges seethe, tremendously<br/>
Aroused by puffing gusts; and whatso'er<br/>
Of ships are caught within that tumult then<br/>
Come into extreme peril, dashed along.<br/>
This haps when sometimes wind's aroused force<br/>
Can't burst the cloud it tries to, but down-weighs<br/>
That cloud, until 'tis like a column from sky<br/>
Upon the seas pushed downward—gradually,<br/>
As if a Somewhat from on high were shoved<br/>
By fist and nether thrust of arm, and lengthened<br/>
Far to the waves. And when the force of wind<br/>
Hath rived this cloud, from out the cloud it rushes<br/>
Down on the seas, and starts among the waves<br/>
A wondrous seething, for the eddying whirl<br/>
Descends and downward draws along with it<br/>
That cloud of ductile body. And soon as ever<br/>
'Thas shoved unto the levels of the main<br/>
That laden cloud, the whirl suddenly then<br/>
Plunges its whole self into the waters there<br/>
And rouses all the sea with monstrous roar,<br/>
Constraining it to seethe. It happens too<br/>
That very vortex of the wind involves<br/>
Itself in clouds, scraping from out the air<br/>
The seeds of cloud, and counterfeits, as 'twere,<br/>
The "bellows" pushed from heaven. And when this shape<br/>
Hath dropped upon the lands and burst apart,<br/>
It belches forth immeasurable might<br/>
Of whirlwind and of blast. Yet since 'tis formed<br/>
At most but rarely, and on land the hills<br/>
Must block its way, 'tis seen more oft out there<br/>
On the broad prospect of the level main<br/>
Along the free horizons.<br/>
<br/>
Into being<br/>
The clouds condense, when in this upper space<br/>
Of the high heaven have gathered suddenly,<br/>
As round they flew, unnumbered particles—<br/>
World's rougher ones, which can, though interlinked<br/>
With scanty couplings, yet be fastened firm,<br/>
The one on other caught. These particles<br/>
First cause small clouds to form; and, thereupon,<br/>
These catch the one on other and swarm in a flock<br/>
And grow by their conjoining, and by winds<br/>
Are borne along, along, until collects<br/>
The tempest fury. Happens, too, the nearer<br/>
The mountain summits neighbour to the sky,<br/>
The more unceasingly their far crags smoke<br/>
With the thick darkness of swart cloud, because<br/>
When first the mists do form, ere ever the eyes<br/>
Can there behold them (tenuous as they be),<br/>
The carrier-winds will drive them up and on<br/>
Unto the topmost summits of the mountain;<br/>
And then at last it happens, when they be<br/>
In vaster throng upgathered, that they can<br/>
By this very condensation lie revealed,<br/>
And that at same time they are seen to surge<br/>
From very vertex of the mountain up<br/>
Into far ether. For very fact and feeling,<br/>
As we up-climb high mountains, proveth clear<br/>
That windy are those upward regions free.<br/>
Besides, the clothes hung-out along the shore,<br/>
When in they take the clinging moisture, prove<br/>
That nature lifts from over all the sea<br/>
Unnumbered particles. Whereby the more<br/>
'Tis manifest that many particles<br/>
Even from the salt upheavings of the main<br/>
Can rise together to augment the bulk<br/>
Of massed clouds. For moistures in these twain<br/>
Are near akin. Besides, from out all rivers,<br/>
As well as from the land itself, we see<br/>
Up-rising mists and steam, which like a breath<br/>
Are forced out from them and borne aloft,<br/>
To curtain heaven with their murk, and make,<br/>
By slow foregathering, the skiey clouds.<br/>
For, in addition, lo, the heat on high<br/>
Of constellated ether burdens down<br/>
Upon them, and by sort of condensation<br/>
Weaveth beneath the azure firmament<br/>
The reek of darkling cloud. It happens, too,<br/>
That hither to the skies from the Beyond<br/>
Do come those particles which make the clouds<br/>
And flying thunderheads. For I have taught<br/>
That this their number is innumerable<br/>
And infinite the sum of the Abyss,<br/>
And I have shown with what stupendous speed<br/>
Those bodies fly and how they're wont to pass<br/>
Amain through incommunicable space.<br/>
Therefore, 'tis not exceeding strange, if oft<br/>
In little time tempest and darkness cover<br/>
With bulking thunderheads hanging on high<br/>
The oceans and the lands, since everywhere<br/>
Through all the narrow tubes of yonder ether,<br/>
Yea, so to speak, through all the breathing-holes<br/>
Of the great upper-world encompassing,<br/>
There be for the primordial elements<br/>
Exits and entrances.<br/>
<br/>
Now come, and how<br/>
The rainy moisture thickens into being<br/>
In the lofty clouds, and how upon the lands<br/>
'Tis then discharged in down-pour of large showers,<br/>
I will unfold. And first triumphantly<br/>
Will I persuade thee that up-rise together,<br/>
With clouds themselves, full many seeds of water<br/>
From out all things, and that they both increase—<br/>
Both clouds and water which is in the clouds—<br/>
In like proportion, as our frames increase<br/>
In like proportion with our blood, as well<br/>
As sweat or any moisture in our members.<br/>
Besides, the clouds take in from time to time<br/>
Much moisture risen from the broad marine,—<br/>
Whilst the winds bear them o'er the mighty sea,<br/>
Like hanging fleeces of white wool. Thuswise,<br/>
Even from all rivers is there lifted up<br/>
Moisture into the clouds. And when therein<br/>
The seeds of water so many in many ways<br/>
Have come together, augmented from all sides,<br/>
The close-jammed clouds then struggle to discharge<br/>
Their rain-storms for a two-fold reason: lo,<br/>
The wind's force crowds them, and the very excess<br/>
Of storm-clouds (massed in a vaster throng)<br/>
Giveth an urge and pressure from above<br/>
And makes the rains out-pour. Besides when, too,<br/>
The clouds are winnowed by the winds, or scattered<br/>
Smitten on top by heat of sun, they send<br/>
Their rainy moisture, and distil their drops,<br/>
Even as the wax, by fiery warmth on top,<br/>
Wasteth and liquefies abundantly.<br/>
But comes the violence of the bigger rains<br/>
When violently the clouds are weighted down<br/>
Both by their cumulated mass and by<br/>
The onset of the wind. And rains are wont<br/>
To endure awhile and to abide for long,<br/>
When many seeds of waters are aroused,<br/>
And clouds on clouds and racks on racks outstream<br/>
In piled layers and are borne along<br/>
From every quarter, and when all the earth<br/>
Smoking exhales her moisture. At such a time<br/>
When sun with beams amid the tempest-murk<br/>
Hath shone against the showers of black rains,<br/>
Then in the swart clouds there emerges bright<br/>
The radiance of the bow.<br/>
<br/>
And as to things<br/>
Not mentioned here which of themselves do grow<br/>
Or of themselves are gendered, and all things<br/>
Which in the clouds condense to being—all,<br/>
Snow and the winds, hail and the hoar-frosts chill,<br/>
And freezing, mighty force—of lakes and pools<br/>
The mighty hardener, and mighty check<br/>
Which in the winter curbeth everywhere<br/>
The rivers as they go—'tis easy still,<br/>
Soon to discover and with mind to see<br/>
How they all happen, whereby gendered,<br/>
When once thou well hast understood just what<br/>
Functions have been vouchsafed from of old<br/>
Unto the procreant atoms of the world.<br/>
Now come, and what the law of earthquakes is<br/>
Hearken, and first of all take care to know<br/>
That the under-earth, like to the earth around us,<br/>
Is full of windy caverns all about;<br/>
And many a pool and many a grim abyss<br/>
She bears within her bosom, ay, and cliffs<br/>
And jagged scarps; and many a river, hid<br/>
Beneath her chine, rolls rapidly along<br/>
Its billows and plunging boulders. For clear fact<br/>
Requires that earth must be in every part<br/>
Alike in constitution. Therefore, earth,<br/>
With these things underneath affixed and set,<br/>
Trembleth above, jarred by big down-tumblings,<br/>
When time hath undermined the huge caves,<br/>
The subterranean. Yea, whole mountains fall,<br/>
And instantly from spot of that big jar<br/>
There quiver the tremors far and wide abroad.<br/>
And with good reason: since houses on the street<br/>
Begin to quake throughout, when jarred by a cart<br/>
Of no large weight; and, too, the furniture<br/>
Within the house up-bounds, when a paving-block<br/>
Gives either iron rim of the wheels a jolt.<br/>
It happens, too, when some prodigious bulk<br/>
Of age-worn soil is rolled from mountain slopes<br/>
Into tremendous pools of water dark,<br/>
That the reeling land itself is rocked about<br/>
By the water's undulations; as a basin<br/>
Sometimes won't come to rest until the fluid<br/>
Within it ceases to be rocked about<br/>
In random undulations.<br/>
<br/>
And besides,<br/>
When subterranean winds, up-gathered there<br/>
In the hollow deeps, bulk forward from one spot,<br/>
And press with the big urge of mighty powers<br/>
Against the lofty grottos, then the earth<br/>
Bulks to that quarter whither push amain<br/>
The headlong winds. Then all the builded houses<br/>
Above ground—and the more, the higher up-reared<br/>
Unto the sky—lean ominously, careening<br/>
Into the same direction; and the beams,<br/>
Wrenched forward, over-hang, ready to go.<br/>
Yet dread men to believe that there awaits<br/>
The nature of the mighty world a time<br/>
Of doom and cataclysm, albeit they see<br/>
So great a bulk of lands to bulge and break!<br/>
And lest the winds blew back again, no force<br/>
Could rein things in nor hold from sure career<br/>
On to disaster. But now because those winds<br/>
Blow back and forth in alternation strong,<br/>
And, so to say, rallying charge again,<br/>
And then repulsed retreat, on this account<br/>
Earth oftener threatens than she brings to pass<br/>
Collapses dire. For to one side she leans,<br/>
Then back she sways; and after tottering<br/>
Forward, recovers then her seats of poise.<br/>
Thus, this is why whole houses rock, the roofs<br/>
More than the middle stories, middle more<br/>
Than lowest, and the lowest least of all.<br/>
<br/>
Arises, too, this same great earth-quaking,<br/>
When wind and some prodigious force of air,<br/>
Collected from without or down within<br/>
The old telluric deeps, have hurled themselves<br/>
Amain into those caverns sub-terrene,<br/>
And there at first tumultuously chafe<br/>
Among the vasty grottos, borne about<br/>
In mad rotations, till their lashed force<br/>
Aroused out-bursts abroad, and then and there,<br/>
Riving the deep earth, makes a mighty chasm—<br/>
What once in Syrian Sidon did befall,<br/>
And once in Peloponnesian Aegium,<br/>
Twain cities which such out-break of wild air<br/>
And earth's convulsion, following hard upon,<br/>
O'erthrew of old. And many a walled town,<br/>
Besides, hath fall'n by such omnipotent<br/>
Convulsions on the land, and in the sea<br/>
Engulfed hath sunken many a city down<br/>
With all its populace. But if, indeed,<br/>
They burst not forth, yet is the very rush<br/>
Of the wild air and fury-force of wind<br/>
Then dissipated, like an ague-fit,<br/>
Through the innumerable pores of earth,<br/>
To set her all a-shake—even as a chill,<br/>
When it hath gone into our marrow-bones,<br/>
Sets us convulsively, despite ourselves,<br/>
A-shivering and a-shaking. Therefore, men<br/>
With two-fold terror bustle in alarm<br/>
Through cities to and fro: they fear the roofs<br/>
Above the head; and underfoot they dread<br/>
The caverns, lest the nature of the earth<br/>
Suddenly rend them open, and she gape,<br/>
Herself asunder, with tremendous maw,<br/>
And, all confounded, seek to chock it full<br/>
With her own ruins. Let men, then, go on<br/>
Feigning at will that heaven and earth shall be<br/>
Inviolable, entrusted evermore<br/>
To an eternal weal: and yet at times<br/>
The very force of danger here at hand<br/>
Prods them on some side with this goad of fear—<br/>
This among others—that the earth, withdrawn<br/>
Abruptly from under their feet, be hurried down,<br/>
Down into the abyss, and the Sum-of-Things<br/>
Be following after, utterly fordone,<br/>
Till be but wrack and wreckage of a world.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>EXTRAORDINARY AND PARADOXICAL TELLURIC<br/>
PHENOMENA<br/></p>
<p>In chief, men marvel nature renders not<br/>
Bigger and bigger the bulk of ocean, since<br/>
So vast the down-rush of the waters be,<br/>
And every river out of every realm<br/>
Cometh thereto; and add the random rains<br/>
And flying tempests, which spatter every sea<br/>
And every land bedew; add their own springs:<br/>
Yet all of these unto the ocean's sum<br/>
Shall be but as the increase of a drop.<br/>
Wherefore 'tis less a marvel that the sea,<br/>
The mighty ocean, increaseth not. Besides,<br/>
Sun with his heat draws off a mighty part:<br/>
Yea, we behold that sun with burning beams<br/>
To dry our garments dripping all with wet;<br/>
And many a sea, and far out-spread beneath,<br/>
Do we behold. Therefore, however slight<br/>
The portion of wet that sun on any spot<br/>
Culls from the level main, he still will take<br/>
From off the waves in such a wide expanse<br/>
Abundantly. Then, further, also winds,<br/>
Sweeping the level waters, can bear off<br/>
A mighty part of wet, since we behold<br/>
Oft in a single night the highways dried<br/>
By winds, and soft mud crusted o'er at dawn.<br/>
Again, I've taught thee that the clouds bear off<br/>
Much moisture too, up-taken from the reaches<br/>
Of the mighty main, and sprinkle it about<br/>
O'er all the zones, when rain is on the lands<br/>
And winds convey the aery racks of vapour.<br/>
Lastly, since earth is porous through her frame,<br/>
And neighbours on the seas, girdling their shores,<br/>
The water's wet must seep into the lands<br/>
From briny ocean, as from lands it comes<br/>
Into the seas. For brine is filtered off,<br/>
And then the liquid stuff seeps back again<br/>
And all re-poureth at the river-heads,<br/>
Whence in fresh-water currents it returns<br/>
Over the lands, adown the channels which<br/>
Were cleft erstwhile and erstwhile bore along<br/>
The liquid-footed floods.<br/>
<br/>
And now the cause<br/>
Whereby athrough the throat of Aetna's Mount<br/>
Such vast tornado-fires out-breathe at times,<br/>
I will unfold: for with no middling might<br/>
Of devastation the flamy tempest rose<br/>
And held dominion in Sicilian fields:<br/>
Drawing upon itself the upturned faces<br/>
Of neighbouring clans, what time they saw afar<br/>
The skiey vaults a-fume and sparkling all,<br/>
And filled their bosoms with dread anxiety<br/>
Of what new thing nature were travailing at.<br/>
<br/>
In these affairs it much behooveth thee<br/>
To look both wide and deep, and far abroad<br/>
To peer to every quarter, that thou mayst<br/>
Remember how boundless is the Sum-of-Things,<br/>
And mark how infinitely small a part<br/>
Of the whole Sum is this one sky of ours—<br/>
O not so large a part as is one man<br/>
Of the whole earth. And plainly if thou viewest<br/>
This cosmic fact, placing it square in front,<br/>
And plainly understandest, thou wilt leave<br/>
Wondering at many things. For who of us<br/>
Wondereth if some one gets into his joints<br/>
A fever, gathering head with fiery heat,<br/>
Or any other dolorous disease<br/>
Along his members? For anon the foot<br/>
Grows blue and bulbous; often the sharp twinge<br/>
Seizes the teeth, attacks the very eyes;<br/>
Out-breaks the sacred fire, and, crawling on<br/>
Over the body, burneth every part<br/>
It seizeth on, and works its hideous way<br/>
Along the frame. No marvel this, since, lo,<br/>
Of things innumerable be seeds enough,<br/>
And this our earth and sky do bring to us<br/>
Enough of bane from whence can grow the strength<br/>
Of maladies uncounted. Thuswise, then,<br/>
We must suppose to all the sky and earth<br/>
Are ever supplied from out the infinite<br/>
All things, O all in stores enough whereby<br/>
The shaken earth can of a sudden move,<br/>
And fierce typhoons can over sea and lands<br/>
Go tearing on, and Aetna's fires o'erflow,<br/>
And heaven become a flame-burst. For that, too,<br/>
Happens at times, and the celestial vaults<br/>
Glow into fire, and rainy tempests rise<br/>
In heavier congregation, when, percase,<br/>
The seeds of water have foregathered thus<br/>
From out the infinite. "Aye, but passing huge<br/>
The fiery turmoil of that conflagration!"<br/>
So sayst thou; well, huge many a river seems<br/>
To him that erstwhile ne'er a larger saw;<br/>
Thus, huge seems tree or man; and everything<br/>
Which mortal sees the biggest of each class,<br/>
That he imagines to be "huge"; though yet<br/>
All these, with sky and land and sea to boot,<br/>
Are all as nothing to the sum entire<br/>
Of the all-Sum.<br/>
<br/>
But now I will unfold<br/>
At last how yonder suddenly angered flame<br/>
Out-blows abroad from vasty furnaces<br/>
Aetnaean. First, the mountain's nature is<br/>
All under-hollow, propped about, about<br/>
With caverns of basaltic piers. And, lo,<br/>
In all its grottos be there wind and air—<br/>
For wind is made when air hath been uproused<br/>
By violent agitation. When this air<br/>
Is heated through and through, and, raging round,<br/>
Hath made the earth and all the rocks it touches<br/>
Horribly hot, and hath struck off from them<br/>
Fierce fire of swiftest flame, it lifts itself<br/>
And hurtles thus straight upwards through its throat<br/>
Into high heav'n, and thus bears on afar<br/>
Its burning blasts and scattereth afar<br/>
Its ashes, and rolls a smoke of pitchy murk<br/>
And heaveth the while boulders of wondrous weight—<br/>
Leaving no doubt in thee that 'tis the air's<br/>
Tumultuous power. Besides, in mighty part,<br/>
The sea there at the roots of that same mount<br/>
Breaks its old billows and sucks back its surf.<br/>
And grottos from the sea pass in below<br/>
Even to the bottom of the mountain's throat.<br/>
Herethrough thou must admit there go...<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>And the conditions force [the water and air]<br/>
Deeply to penetrate from the open sea,<br/>
And to out-blow abroad, and to up-bear<br/>
Thereby the flame, and to up-cast from deeps<br/>
The boulders, and to rear the clouds of sand.<br/>
For at the top be "bowls," as people there<br/>
Are wont to name what we at Rome do call<br/>
The throats and mouths.<br/>
<br/>
There be, besides, some thing<br/>
Of which 'tis not enough one only cause<br/>
To state—but rather several, whereof one<br/>
Will be the true: lo, if thou shouldst espy<br/>
Lying afar some fellow's lifeless corse,<br/>
'Twere meet to name all causes of a death,<br/>
That cause of his death might thereby be named:<br/>
For prove thou mayst he perished not by steel,<br/>
By cold, nor even by poison nor disease,<br/>
Yet somewhat of this sort hath come to him<br/>
We know—And thus we have to say the same<br/>
In divers cases.<br/>
<br/>
Toward the summer, Nile<br/>
Waxeth and overfloweth the champaign,<br/>
Unique in all the landscape, river sole<br/>
Of the Aegyptians. In mid-season heats<br/>
Often and oft he waters Aegypt o'er,<br/>
Either because in summer against his mouths<br/>
Come those northwinds which at that time of year<br/>
Men name the Etesian blasts, and, blowing thus<br/>
Upstream, retard, and, forcing back his waves,<br/>
Fill him o'erfull and force his flow to stop.<br/>
For out of doubt these blasts which driven be<br/>
From icy constellations of the pole<br/>
Are borne straight up the river. Comes that river<br/>
From forth the sultry places down the south,<br/>
Rising far up in midmost realm of day,<br/>
Among black generations of strong men<br/>
With sun-baked skins. 'Tis possible, besides,<br/>
That a big bulk of piled sand may bar<br/>
His mouths against his onward waves, when sea,<br/>
Wild in the winds, tumbles the sand to inland;<br/>
Whereby the river's outlet were less free,<br/>
Likewise less headlong his descending floods.<br/>
It may be, too, that in this season rains<br/>
Are more abundant at its fountain head,<br/>
Because the Etesian blasts of those northwinds<br/>
Then urge all clouds into those inland parts.<br/>
And, soothly, when they're thus foregathered there,<br/>
Urged yonder into midmost realm of day,<br/>
Then, crowded against the lofty mountain sides,<br/>
They're massed and powerfully pressed. Again,<br/>
Perchance, his waters wax, O far away,<br/>
Among the Aethiopians' lofty mountains,<br/>
When the all-beholding sun with thawing beams<br/>
Drives the white snows to flow into the vales.<br/>
<br/>
Now come; and unto thee I will unfold,<br/>
As to the Birdless spots and Birdless tarns,<br/>
What sort of nature they are furnished with.<br/>
First, as to name of "birdless,"—that derives<br/>
From very fact, because they noxious be<br/>
Unto all birds. For when above those spots<br/>
In horizontal flight the birds have come,<br/>
Forgetting to oar with wings, they furl their sails,<br/>
And, with down-drooping of their delicate necks,<br/>
Fall headlong into earth, if haply such<br/>
The nature of the spots, or into water,<br/>
If haply spreads thereunder Birdless tarn.<br/>
Such spot's at Cumae, where the mountains smoke,<br/>
Charged with the pungent sulphur, and increased<br/>
With steaming springs. And such a spot there is<br/>
Within the walls of Athens, even there<br/>
On summit of Acropolis, beside<br/>
Fane of Tritonian Pallas bountiful,<br/>
Where never cawing crows can wing their course,<br/>
Not even when smoke the altars with good gifts,—<br/>
But evermore they flee—yet not from wrath<br/>
Of Pallas, grieved at that espial old,<br/>
As poets of the Greeks have sung the tale;<br/>
But very nature of the place compels.<br/>
In Syria also—as men say—a spot<br/>
Is to be seen, where also four-foot kinds,<br/>
As soon as ever they've set their steps within,<br/>
Collapse, o'ercome by its essential power,<br/>
As if there slaughtered to the under-gods.<br/>
Lo, all these wonders work by natural law,<br/>
And from what causes they are brought to pass<br/>
The origin is manifest; so, haply,<br/>
Let none believe that in these regions stands<br/>
The gate of Orcus, nor us then suppose,<br/>
Haply, that thence the under-gods draw down<br/>
Souls to dark shores of Acheron—as stags,<br/>
The wing-footed, are thought to draw to light,<br/>
By sniffing nostrils, from their dusky lairs<br/>
The wriggling generations of wild snakes.<br/>
How far removed from true reason is this,<br/>
Perceive thou straight; for now I'll try to say<br/>
Somewhat about the very fact.<br/>
<br/>
And, first,<br/>
This do I say, as oft I've said before:<br/>
In earth are atoms of things of every sort;<br/>
And know, these all thus rise from out the earth—<br/>
Many life-giving which be good for food,<br/>
And many which can generate disease<br/>
And hasten death, O many primal seeds<br/>
Of many things in many modes—since earth<br/>
Contains them mingled and gives forth discrete.<br/>
And we have shown before that certain things<br/>
Be unto certain creatures suited more<br/>
For ends of life, by virtue of a nature,<br/>
A texture, and primordial shapes, unlike<br/>
For kinds alike. Then too 'tis thine to see<br/>
How many things oppressive be and foul<br/>
To man, and to sensation most malign:<br/>
Many meander miserably through ears;<br/>
Many in-wind athrough the nostrils too,<br/>
Malign and harsh when mortal draws a breath;<br/>
Of not a few must one avoid the touch;<br/>
Of not a few must one escape the sight;<br/>
And some there be all loathsome to the taste;<br/>
And many, besides, relax the languid limbs<br/>
Along the frame, and undermine the soul<br/>
In its abodes within. To certain trees<br/>
There hath been given so dolorous a shade<br/>
That often they gender achings of the head,<br/>
If one but be beneath, outstretched on the sward.<br/>
There is, again, on Helicon's high hills<br/>
A tree that's wont to kill a man outright<br/>
By fetid odour of its very flower.<br/>
And when the pungent stench of the night-lamp,<br/>
Extinguished but a moment since, assails<br/>
The nostrils, then and there it puts to sleep<br/>
A man afflicted with the falling sickness<br/>
And foamings at the mouth. A woman, too,<br/>
At the heavy castor drowses back in chair,<br/>
And from her delicate fingers slips away<br/>
Her gaudy handiwork, if haply she<br/>
Hath got the whiff at menstruation-time.<br/>
Once more, if thou delayest in hot baths,<br/>
When thou art over-full, how readily<br/>
From stool in middle of the steaming water<br/>
Thou tumblest in a fit! How readily<br/>
The heavy fumes of charcoal wind their way<br/>
Into the brain, unless beforehand we<br/>
Of water 've drunk. But when a burning fever,<br/>
O'ermastering man, hath seized upon his limbs,<br/>
Then odour of wine is like a hammer-blow.<br/>
And seest thou not how in the very earth<br/>
Sulphur is gendered and bitumen thickens<br/>
With noisome stench?—What direful stenches, too,<br/>
Scaptensula out-breathes from down below,<br/>
When men pursue the veins of silver and gold,<br/>
With pick-axe probing round the hidden realms<br/>
Deep in the earth?—Or what of deadly bane<br/>
The mines of gold exhale? O what a look,<br/>
And what a ghastly hue they give to men!<br/>
And seest thou not, or hearest, how they're wont<br/>
In little time to perish, and how fail<br/>
The life-stores in those folk whom mighty power<br/>
Of grim necessity confineth there<br/>
In such a task? Thus, this telluric earth<br/>
Out-streams with all these dread effluvia<br/>
And breathes them out into the open world<br/>
And into the visible regions under heaven.<br/>
<br/>
Thus, too, those Birdless places must up-send<br/>
An essence bearing death to winged things,<br/>
Which from the earth rises into the breezes<br/>
To poison part of skiey space, and when<br/>
Thither the winged is on pennons borne,<br/>
There, seized by the unseen poison, 'tis ensnared,<br/>
And from the horizontal of its flight<br/>
Drops to the spot whence sprang the effluvium.<br/>
And when 'thas there collapsed, then the same power<br/>
Of that effluvium takes from all its limbs<br/>
The relics of its life. That power first strikes<br/>
The creatures with a wildering dizziness,<br/>
And then thereafter, when they're once down-fallen<br/>
Into the poison's very fountains, then<br/>
Life, too, they vomit out perforce, because<br/>
So thick the stores of bane around them fume.<br/>
<br/>
Again, at times it happens that this power,<br/>
This exhalation of the Birdless places,<br/>
Dispels the air betwixt the ground and birds,<br/>
Leaving well-nigh a void. And thither when<br/>
In horizontal flight the birds have come,<br/>
Forthwith their buoyancy of pennons limps,<br/>
All useless, and each effort of both wings<br/>
Falls out in vain. Here, when without all power<br/>
To buoy themselves and on their wings to lean,<br/>
Lo, nature constrains them by their weight to slip<br/>
Down to the earth, and lying prostrate there<br/>
Along the well-nigh empty void, they spend<br/>
Their souls through all the openings of their frame.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>Further, the water of wells is colder then<br/>
At summer time, because the earth by heat<br/>
Is rarefied, and sends abroad in air<br/>
Whatever seeds it peradventure have<br/>
Of its own fiery exhalations.<br/>
The more, then, the telluric ground is drained<br/>
Of heat, the colder grows the water hid<br/>
Within the earth. Further, when all the earth<br/>
Is by the cold compressed, and thus contracts<br/>
And, so to say, concretes, it happens, lo,<br/>
That by contracting it expresses then<br/>
Into the wells what heat it bears itself.<br/>
<br/>
'Tis said at Hammon's fane a fountain is,<br/>
In daylight cold and hot in time of night.<br/>
This fountain men be-wonder over-much,<br/>
And think that suddenly it seethes in heat<br/>
By intense sun, the subterranean, when<br/>
Night with her terrible murk hath cloaked the lands—<br/>
What's not true reasoning by a long remove:<br/>
I' faith when sun o'erhead, touching with beams<br/>
An open body of water, had no power<br/>
To render it hot upon its upper side,<br/>
Though his high light possess such burning glare,<br/>
How, then, can he, when under the gross earth,<br/>
Make water boil and glut with fiery heat?—<br/>
And, specially, since scarcely potent he<br/>
Through hedging walls of houses to inject<br/>
His exhalations hot, with ardent rays.<br/>
What, then's, the principle? Why, this, indeed:<br/>
The earth about that spring is porous more<br/>
Than elsewhere the telluric ground, and be<br/>
Many the seeds of fire hard by the water;<br/>
On this account, when night with dew-fraught shades<br/>
Hath whelmed the earth, anon the earth deep down<br/>
Grows chill, contracts; and thuswise squeezes out<br/>
Into the spring what seeds she holds of fire<br/>
(As one might squeeze with fist), which render hot<br/>
The touch and steam of the fluid. Next, when sun,<br/>
Up-risen, with his rays has split the soil<br/>
And rarefied the earth with waxing heat,<br/>
Again into their ancient abodes return<br/>
The seeds of fire, and all the Hot of water<br/>
Into the earth retires; and this is why<br/>
The fountain in the daylight gets so cold.<br/>
Besides, the water's wet is beat upon<br/>
By rays of sun, and, with the dawn, becomes<br/>
Rarer in texture under his pulsing blaze;<br/>
And, therefore, whatso seeds it holds of fire<br/>
It renders up, even as it renders oft<br/>
The frost that it contains within itself<br/>
And thaws its ice and looseneth the knots.<br/>
There is, moreover, a fountain cold in kind<br/>
That makes a bit of tow (above it held)<br/>
Take fire forthwith and shoot a flame; so, too,<br/>
A pitch-pine torch will kindle and flare round<br/>
Along its waves, wherever 'tis impelled<br/>
Afloat before the breeze. No marvel, this:<br/>
Because full many seeds of heat there be<br/>
Within the water; and, from earth itself<br/>
Out of the deeps must particles of fire<br/>
Athrough the entire fountain surge aloft,<br/>
And speed in exhalations into air<br/>
Forth and abroad (yet not in numbers enow<br/>
As to make hot the fountain). And, moreo'er,<br/>
Some force constrains them, scattered through the water,<br/>
Forthwith to burst abroad, and to combine<br/>
In flame above. Even as a fountain far<br/>
There is at Aradus amid the sea,<br/>
Which bubbles out sweet water and disparts<br/>
From round itself the salt waves; and, behold,<br/>
In many another region the broad main<br/>
Yields to the thirsty mariners timely help,<br/>
Belching sweet waters forth amid salt waves.<br/>
Just so, then, can those seeds of fire burst forth<br/>
Athrough that other fount, and bubble out<br/>
Abroad against the bit of tow; and when<br/>
They there collect or cleave unto the torch,<br/>
Forthwith they readily flash aflame, because<br/>
The tow and torches, also, in themselves<br/>
Have many seeds of latent fire. Indeed,<br/>
And seest thou not, when near the nightly lamps<br/>
Thou bringest a flaxen wick, extinguished<br/>
A moment since, it catches fire before<br/>
'Thas touched the flame, and in same wise a torch?<br/>
And many another object flashes aflame<br/>
When at a distance, touched by heat alone,<br/>
Before 'tis steeped in veritable fire.<br/>
This, then, we must suppose to come to pass<br/>
In that spring also.<br/>
<br/>
Now to other things!<br/>
And I'll begin to treat by what decree<br/>
Of nature it came to pass that iron can be<br/>
By that stone drawn which Greeks the magnet call<br/>
After the country's name (its origin<br/>
Being in country of Magnesian folk).<br/>
This stone men marvel at; and sure it oft<br/>
Maketh a chain of rings, depending, lo,<br/>
From off itself! Nay, thou mayest see at times<br/>
Five or yet more in order dangling down<br/>
And swaying in the delicate winds, whilst one<br/>
Depends from other, cleaving to under-side,<br/>
And ilk one feels the stone's own power and bonds—<br/>
So over-masteringly its power flows down.<br/>
<br/>
In things of this sort, much must be made sure<br/>
Ere thou account of the thing itself canst give,<br/>
And the approaches roundabout must be;<br/>
Wherefore the more do I exact of thee<br/>
A mind and ears attent.<br/>
<br/>
First, from all things<br/>
We see soever, evermore must flow,<br/>
Must be discharged and strewn about, about,<br/>
Bodies that strike the eyes, awaking sight.<br/>
From certain things flow odours evermore,<br/>
As cold from rivers, heat from sun, and spray<br/>
From waves of ocean, eater-out of walls<br/>
Along the coasts. Nor ever cease to seep<br/>
The varied echoings athrough the air.<br/>
Then, too, there comes into the mouth at times<br/>
The wet of a salt taste, when by the sea<br/>
We roam about; and so, whene'er we watch<br/>
The wormwood being mixed, its bitter stings.<br/>
To such degree from all things is each thing<br/>
Borne streamingly along, and sent about<br/>
To every region round; and nature grants<br/>
Nor rest nor respite of the onward flow,<br/>
Since 'tis incessantly we feeling have,<br/>
And all the time are suffered to descry<br/>
And smell all things at hand, and hear them sound.<br/>
<br/>
Now will I seek again to bring to mind<br/>
How porous a body all things have—a fact<br/>
Made manifest in my first canto, too.<br/>
For, truly, though to know this doth import<br/>
For many things, yet for this very thing<br/>
On which straightway I'm going to discourse,<br/>
'Tis needful most of all to make it sure<br/>
That naught's at hand but body mixed with void.<br/>
A first ensample: in grottos, rocks o'erhead<br/>
Sweat moisture and distil the oozy drops;<br/>
Likewise, from all our body seeps the sweat;<br/>
There grows the beard, and along our members all<br/>
And along our frame the hairs. Through all our veins<br/>
Disseminates the foods, and gives increase<br/>
And aliment down to the extreme parts,<br/>
Even to the tiniest finger-nails. Likewise,<br/>
Through solid bronze the cold and fiery heat<br/>
We feel to pass; likewise, we feel them pass<br/>
Through gold, through silver, when we clasp in hand<br/>
The brimming goblets. And, again, there flit<br/>
Voices through houses' hedging walls of stone;<br/>
Odour seeps through, and cold, and heat of fire<br/>
That's wont to penetrate even strength of iron.<br/>
Again, where corselet of the sky girds round<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>And at same time, some Influence of bane,<br/>
When from Beyond 'thas stolen into [our world].<br/>
And tempests, gathering from the earth and sky,<br/>
Back to the sky and earth absorbed retire—<br/>
With reason, since there's naught that's fashioned not<br/>
With body porous.<br/>
<br/>
Furthermore, not all<br/>
The particles which be from things thrown off<br/>
Are furnished with same qualities for sense,<br/>
Nor be for all things equally adapt.<br/>
A first ensample: the sun doth bake and parch<br/>
The earth; but ice he thaws, and with his beams<br/>
Compels the lofty snows, up-reared white<br/>
Upon the lofty hills, to waste away;<br/>
Then, wax, if set beneath the heat of him,<br/>
Melts to a liquid. And the fire, likewise,<br/>
Will melt the copper and will fuse the gold,<br/>
But hides and flesh it shrivels up and shrinks.<br/>
The water hardens the iron just off the fire,<br/>
But hides and flesh (made hard by heat) it softens.<br/>
The oleaster-tree as much delights<br/>
The bearded she-goats, verily as though<br/>
'Twere nectar-steeped and shed ambrosia;<br/>
Than which is naught that burgeons into leaf<br/>
More bitter food for man. A hog draws back<br/>
For marjoram oil, and every unguent fears<br/>
Fierce poison these unto the bristled hogs,<br/>
Yet unto us from time to time they seem,<br/>
As 'twere, to give new life. But, contrariwise,<br/>
Though unto us the mire be filth most foul,<br/>
To hogs that mire doth so delightsome seem<br/>
That they with wallowing from belly to back<br/>
Are never cloyed.<br/>
<br/>
A point remains, besides,<br/>
Which best it seems to tell of, ere I go<br/>
To telling of the fact at hand itself.<br/>
Since to the varied things assigned be<br/>
The many pores, those pores must be diverse<br/>
In nature one from other, and each have<br/>
Its very shape, its own direction fixed.<br/>
And so, indeed, in breathing creatures be<br/>
The several senses, of which each takes in<br/>
Unto itself, in its own fashion ever,<br/>
Its own peculiar object. For we mark<br/>
How sounds do into one place penetrate,<br/>
Into another flavours of all juice,<br/>
And savour of smell into a third. Moreover,<br/>
One sort through rocks we see to seep, and, lo,<br/>
One sort to pass through wood, another still<br/>
Through gold, and others to go out and off<br/>
Through silver and through glass. For we do see<br/>
Through some pores form-and-look of things to flow,<br/>
Through others heat to go, and some things still<br/>
To speedier pass than others through same pores.<br/>
Of verity, the nature of these same paths,<br/>
Varying in many modes (as aforesaid)<br/>
Because of unlike nature and warp and woof<br/>
Of cosmic things, constrains it so to be.<br/>
<br/>
Wherefore, since all these matters now have been<br/>
Established and settled well for us<br/>
As premises prepared, for what remains<br/>
'Twill not be hard to render clear account<br/>
By means of these, and the whole cause reveal<br/>
Whereby the magnet lures the strength of iron.<br/>
First, stream there must from off the lode-stone seeds<br/>
Innumerable, a very tide, which smites<br/>
By blows that air asunder lying betwixt<br/>
The stone and iron. And when is emptied out<br/>
This space, and a large place between the two<br/>
Is made a void, forthwith the primal germs<br/>
Of iron, headlong slipping, fall conjoined<br/>
Into the vacuum, and the ring itself<br/>
By reason thereof doth follow after and go<br/>
Thuswise with all its body. And naught there is<br/>
That of its own primordial elements<br/>
More thoroughly knit or tighter linked coheres<br/>
Than nature and cold roughness of stout iron.<br/>
Wherefore, 'tis less a marvel what I said,<br/>
That from such elements no bodies can<br/>
From out the iron collect in larger throng<br/>
And be into the vacuum borne along,<br/>
Without the ring itself do follow after.<br/>
And this it does, and followeth on until<br/>
'Thath reached the stone itself and cleaved to it<br/>
By links invisible. Moreover, likewise,<br/>
The motion's assisted by a thing of aid<br/>
(Whereby the process easier becomes),—<br/>
Namely, by this: as soon as rarer grows<br/>
That air in front of the ring, and space between<br/>
Is emptied more and made a void, forthwith<br/>
It happens all the air that lies behind<br/>
Conveys it onward, pushing from the rear.<br/>
For ever doth the circumambient air<br/>
Drub things unmoved, but here it pushes forth<br/>
The iron, because upon one side the space<br/>
Lies void and thus receives the iron in.<br/>
This air, whereof I am reminding thee,<br/>
Winding athrough the iron's abundant pores<br/>
So subtly into the tiny parts thereof,<br/>
Shoves it and pushes, as wind the ship and sails.<br/>
The same doth happen in all directions forth:<br/>
From whatso side a space is made a void,<br/>
Whether from crosswise or above, forthwith<br/>
The neighbour particles are borne along<br/>
Into the vacuum; for of verity,<br/>
They're set a-going by poundings from elsewhere,<br/>
Nor by themselves of own accord can they<br/>
Rise upwards into the air. Again, all things<br/>
Must in their framework hold some air, because<br/>
They are of framework porous, and the air<br/>
Encompasses and borders on all things.<br/>
Thus, then, this air in iron so deeply stored<br/>
Is tossed evermore in vexed motion,<br/>
And therefore drubs upon the ring sans doubt<br/>
And shakes it up inside....<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>In sooth, that ring is thither borne along<br/>
To where 'thas once plunged headlong—thither, lo,<br/>
Unto the void whereto it took its start.<br/>
<br/>
It happens, too, at times that nature of iron<br/>
Shrinks from this stone away, accustomed<br/>
By turns to flee and follow. Yea, I've seen<br/>
Those Samothracian iron rings leap up,<br/>
And iron filings in the brazen bowls<br/>
Seethe furiously, when underneath was set<br/>
The magnet stone. So strongly iron seems<br/>
To crave to flee that rock. Such discord great<br/>
Is gendered by the interposed brass,<br/>
Because, forsooth, when first the tide of brass<br/>
Hath seized upon and held possession of<br/>
The iron's open passage-ways, thereafter<br/>
Cometh the tide of the stone, and in that iron<br/>
Findeth all spaces full, nor now hath holes<br/>
To swim through, as before. 'Tis thus constrained<br/>
With its own current 'gainst the iron's fabric<br/>
To dash and beat; by means whereof it spues<br/>
Forth from itself—and through the brass stirs up—<br/>
The things which otherwise without the brass<br/>
It sucks into itself. In these affairs<br/>
Marvel thou not that from this stone the tide<br/>
Prevails not likewise other things to move<br/>
With its own blows: for some stand firm by weight,<br/>
As gold; and some cannot be moved forever,<br/>
Because so porous in their framework they<br/>
That there the tide streams through without a break,<br/>
Of which sort stuff of wood is seen to be.<br/>
Therefore, when iron (which lies between the two)<br/>
Hath taken in some atoms of the brass,<br/>
Then do the streams of that Magnesian rock<br/>
Move iron by their smitings.<br/>
<br/>
Yet these things<br/>
Are not so alien from others, that I<br/>
Of this same sort am ill prepared to name<br/>
Ensamples still of things exclusively<br/>
To one another adapt. Thou seest, first,<br/>
How lime alone cementeth stones: how wood<br/>
Only by glue-of-bull with wood is joined—<br/>
So firmly too that oftener the boards<br/>
Crack open along the weakness of the grain<br/>
Ere ever those taurine bonds will lax their hold.<br/>
The vine-born juices with the water-springs<br/>
Are bold to mix, though not the heavy pitch<br/>
With the light oil-of-olive. And purple dye<br/>
Of shell-fish so uniteth with the wool's<br/>
Body alone that it cannot be ta'en<br/>
Away forever—nay, though thou gavest toil<br/>
To restore the same with the Neptunian flood,<br/>
Nay, though all ocean willed to wash it out<br/>
With all its waves. Again, gold unto gold<br/>
Doth not one substance bind, and only one?<br/>
And is not brass by tin joined unto brass?<br/>
And other ensamples how many might one find!<br/>
What then? Nor is there unto thee a need<br/>
Of such long ways and roundabout, nor boots it<br/>
For me much toil on this to spend. More fit<br/>
It is in few words briefly to embrace<br/>
Things many: things whose textures fall together<br/>
So mutually adapt, that cavities<br/>
To solids correspond, these cavities<br/>
Of this thing to the solid parts of that,<br/>
And those of that to solid parts of this—<br/>
Such joinings are the best. Again, some things<br/>
Can be the one with other coupled and held,<br/>
Linked by hooks and eyes, as 'twere; and this<br/>
Seems more the fact with iron and this stone.<br/>
Now, of diseases what the law, and whence<br/>
The Influence of bane upgathering can<br/>
Upon the race of man and herds of cattle<br/>
Kindle a devastation fraught with death,<br/>
I will unfold. And, first, I've taught above<br/>
That seeds there be of many things to us<br/>
Life-giving, and that, contrariwise, there must<br/>
Fly many round bringing disease and death.<br/>
When these have, haply, chanced to collect<br/>
And to derange the atmosphere of earth,<br/>
The air becometh baneful. And, lo, all<br/>
That Influence of bane, that pestilence,<br/>
Or from Beyond down through our atmosphere,<br/>
Like clouds and mists, descends, or else collects<br/>
From earth herself and rises, when, a-soak<br/>
And beat by rains unseasonable and suns,<br/>
Our earth hath then contracted stench and rot.<br/>
Seest thou not, also, that whoso arrive<br/>
In region far from fatherland and home<br/>
Are by the strangeness of the clime and waters<br/>
Distempered?—since conditions vary much.<br/>
For in what else may we suppose the clime<br/>
Among the Britons to differ from Aegypt's own<br/>
(Where totters awry the axis of the world),<br/>
Or in what else to differ Pontic clime<br/>
From Gades' and from climes adown the south,<br/>
On to black generations of strong men<br/>
With sun-baked skins? Even as we thus do see<br/>
Four climes diverse under the four main-winds<br/>
And under the four main-regions of the sky,<br/>
So, too, are seen the colour and face of men<br/>
Vastly to disagree, and fixed diseases<br/>
To seize the generations, kind by kind:<br/>
There is the elephant-disease which down<br/>
In midmost Aegypt, hard by streams of Nile,<br/>
Engendered is—and never otherwhere.<br/>
In Attica the feet are oft attacked,<br/>
And in Achaean lands the eyes. And so<br/>
The divers spots to divers parts and limbs<br/>
Are noxious; 'tis a variable air<br/>
That causes this. Thus when an atmosphere,<br/>
Alien by chance to us, begins to heave,<br/>
And noxious airs begin to crawl along,<br/>
They creep and wind like unto mist and cloud,<br/>
Slowly, and everything upon their way<br/>
They disarrange and force to change its state.<br/>
It happens, too, that when they've come at last<br/>
Into this atmosphere of ours, they taint<br/>
And make it like themselves and alien.<br/>
Therefore, asudden this devastation strange,<br/>
This pestilence, upon the waters falls,<br/>
Or settles on the very crops of grain<br/>
Or other meat of men and feed of flocks.<br/>
Or it remains a subtle force, suspense<br/>
In the atmosphere itself; and when therefrom<br/>
We draw our inhalations of mixed air,<br/>
Into our body equally its bane<br/>
Also we must suck in. In manner like,<br/>
Oft comes the pestilence upon the kine,<br/>
And sickness, too, upon the sluggish sheep.<br/>
Nor aught it matters whether journey we<br/>
To regions adverse to ourselves and change<br/>
The atmospheric cloak, or whether nature<br/>
Herself import a tainted atmosphere<br/>
To us or something strange to our own use<br/>
Which can attack us soon as ever it come.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> THE PLAGUE ATHENS </h2>
<p>'Twas such a manner of disease, 'twas such<br/>
Mortal miasma in Cecropian lands<br/>
Whilom reduced the plains to dead men's bones,<br/>
Unpeopled the highways, drained of citizens<br/>
The Athenian town. For coming from afar,<br/>
Rising in lands of Aegypt, traversing<br/>
Reaches of air and floating fields of foam,<br/>
At last on all Pandion's folk it swooped;<br/>
Whereat by troops unto disease and death<br/>
Were they o'er-given. At first, they'd bear about<br/>
A skull on fire with heat, and eyeballs twain<br/>
Red with suffusion of blank glare. Their throats,<br/>
Black on the inside, sweated oozy blood;<br/>
And the walled pathway of the voice of man<br/>
Was clogged with ulcers; and the very tongue,<br/>
The mind's interpreter, would trickle gore,<br/>
Weakened by torments, tardy, rough to touch.<br/>
Next when that Influence of bane had chocked,<br/>
Down through the throat, the breast, and streamed had<br/>
E'en into sullen heart of those sick folk,<br/>
Then, verily, all the fences of man's life<br/>
Began to topple. From the mouth the breath<br/>
Would roll a noisome stink, as stink to heaven<br/>
Rotting cadavers flung unburied out.<br/>
And, lo, thereafter, all the body's strength<br/>
And every power of mind would languish, now<br/>
In very doorway of destruction.<br/>
And anxious anguish and ululation (mixed<br/>
With many a groan) companioned alway<br/>
The intolerable torments. Night and day,<br/>
Recurrent spasms of vomiting would rack<br/>
Alway their thews and members, breaking down<br/>
With sheer exhaustion men already spent.<br/>
And yet on no one's body couldst thou mark<br/>
The skin with o'er-much heat to burn aglow,<br/>
But rather the body unto touch of hands<br/>
Would offer a warmish feeling, and thereby<br/>
Show red all over, with ulcers, so to say,<br/>
Inbranded, like the "sacred fires" o'erspread<br/>
Along the members. The inward parts of men,<br/>
In truth, would blaze unto the very bones;<br/>
A flame, like flame in furnaces, would blaze<br/>
Within the stomach. Nor couldst aught apply<br/>
Unto their members light enough and thin<br/>
For shift of aid—but coolness and a breeze<br/>
Ever and ever. Some would plunge those limbs<br/>
On fire with bane into the icy streams,<br/>
Hurling the body naked into the waves;<br/>
Many would headlong fling them deeply down<br/>
The water-pits, tumbling with eager mouth<br/>
Already agape. The insatiable thirst<br/>
That whelmed their parched bodies, lo, would make<br/>
A goodly shower seem like to scanty drops.<br/>
Respite of torment was there none. Their frames<br/>
Forspent lay prone. With silent lips of fear<br/>
Would Medicine mumble low, the while she saw<br/>
So many a time men roll their eyeballs round,<br/>
Staring wide-open, unvisited of sleep,<br/>
The heralds of old death. And in those months<br/>
Was given many another sign of death:<br/>
The intellect of mind by sorrow and dread<br/>
Deranged, the sad brow, the countenance<br/>
Fierce and delirious, the tormented ears<br/>
Beset with ringings, the breath quick and short<br/>
Or huge and intermittent, soaking sweat<br/>
A-glisten on neck, the spittle in fine gouts<br/>
Tainted with colour of crocus and so salt,<br/>
The cough scarce wheezing through the rattling throat.<br/>
Aye, and the sinews in the fingered hands<br/>
Were sure to contract, and sure the jointed frame<br/>
To shiver, and up from feet the cold to mount<br/>
Inch after inch: and toward the supreme hour<br/>
At last the pinched nostrils, nose's tip<br/>
A very point, eyes sunken, temples hollow,<br/>
Skin cold and hard, the shuddering grimace,<br/>
The pulled and puffy flesh above the brows!—<br/>
O not long after would their frames lie prone<br/>
In rigid death. And by about the eighth<br/>
Resplendent light of sun, or at the most<br/>
On the ninth flaming of his flambeau, they<br/>
Would render up the life. If any then<br/>
Had 'scaped the doom of that destruction, yet<br/>
Him there awaited in the after days<br/>
A wasting and a death from ulcers vile<br/>
And black discharges of the belly, or else<br/>
Through the clogged nostrils would there ooze along<br/>
Much fouled blood, oft with an aching head:<br/>
Hither would stream a man's whole strength and flesh.<br/>
And whoso had survived that virulent flow<br/>
Of the vile blood, yet into thews of him<br/>
And into his joints and very genitals<br/>
Would pass the old disease. And some there were,<br/>
Dreading the doorways of destruction<br/>
So much, lived on, deprived by the knife<br/>
Of the male member; not a few, though lopped<br/>
Of hands and feet, would yet persist in life,<br/>
And some there were who lost their eyeballs: O<br/>
So fierce a fear of death had fallen on them!<br/>
And some, besides, were by oblivion<br/>
Of all things seized, that even themselves they knew<br/>
No longer. And though corpse on corpse lay piled<br/>
Unburied on ground, the race of birds and beasts<br/>
Would or spring back, scurrying to escape<br/>
The virulent stench, or, if they'd tasted there,<br/>
Would languish in approaching death. But yet<br/>
Hardly at all during those many suns<br/>
Appeared a fowl, nor from the woods went forth<br/>
The sullen generations of wild beasts—<br/>
They languished with disease and died and died.<br/>
In chief, the faithful dogs, in all the streets<br/>
Outstretched, would yield their breath distressfully<br/>
For so that Influence of bane would twist<br/>
Life from their members. Nor was found one sure<br/>
And universal principle of cure:<br/>
For what to one had given the power to take<br/>
The vital winds of air into his mouth,<br/>
And to gaze upward at the vaults of sky,<br/>
The same to others was their death and doom.<br/>
<br/>
In those affairs, O awfullest of all,<br/>
O pitiable most was this, was this:<br/>
Whoso once saw himself in that disease<br/>
Entangled, ay, as damned unto death,<br/>
Would lie in wanhope, with a sullen heart,<br/>
Would, in fore-vision of his funeral,<br/>
Give up the ghost, O then and there. For, lo,<br/>
At no time did they cease one from another<br/>
To catch contagion of the greedy plague,—<br/>
As though but woolly flocks and horned herds;<br/>
And this in chief would heap the dead on dead:<br/>
For who forbore to look to their own sick,<br/>
O these (too eager of life, of death afeard)<br/>
Would then, soon after, slaughtering Neglect<br/>
Visit with vengeance of evil death and base—<br/>
Themselves deserted and forlorn of help.<br/>
But who had stayed at hand would perish there<br/>
By that contagion and the toil which then<br/>
A sense of honour and the pleading voice<br/>
Of weary watchers, mixed with voice of wail<br/>
Of dying folk, forced them to undergo.<br/>
This kind of death each nobler soul would meet.<br/>
The funerals, uncompanioned, forsaken,<br/>
Like rivals contended to be hurried through.<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>And men contending to ensepulchre<br/>
Pile upon pile the throng of their own dead:<br/>
And weary with woe and weeping wandered home;<br/>
And then the most would take to bed from grief.<br/>
Nor could be found not one, whom nor disease<br/>
Nor death, nor woe had not in those dread times<br/>
Attacked.<br/>
<br/>
By now the shepherds and neatherds all,<br/>
Yea, even the sturdy guiders of curved ploughs,<br/>
Began to sicken, and their bodies would lie<br/>
Huddled within back-corners of their huts,<br/>
Delivered by squalor and disease to death.<br/>
O often and often couldst thou then have seen<br/>
On lifeless children lifeless parents prone,<br/>
Or offspring on their fathers', mothers' corpse<br/>
Yielding the life. And into the city poured<br/>
O not in least part from the countryside<br/>
That tribulation, which the peasantry<br/>
Sick, sick, brought thither, thronging from every quarter,<br/>
Plague-stricken mob. All places would they crowd,<br/>
All buildings too; whereby the more would death<br/>
Up-pile a-heap the folk so crammed in town.<br/>
Ah, many a body thirst had dragged and rolled<br/>
Along the highways there was lying strewn<br/>
Besides Silenus-headed water-fountains,—<br/>
The life-breath choked from that too dear desire<br/>
Of pleasant waters. Ah, everywhere along<br/>
The open places of the populace,<br/>
And along the highways, O thou mightest see<br/>
Of many a half-dead body the sagged limbs,<br/>
Rough with squalor, wrapped around with rags,<br/>
Perish from very nastiness, with naught<br/>
But skin upon the bones, well-nigh already<br/>
Buried—in ulcers vile and obscene filth.<br/>
All holy temples, too, of deities<br/>
Had Death becrammed with the carcasses;<br/>
And stood each fane of the Celestial Ones<br/>
Laden with stark cadavers everywhere—<br/>
Places which warders of the shrines had crowded<br/>
With many a guest. For now no longer men<br/>
Did mightily esteem the old Divine,<br/>
The worship of the gods: the woe at hand<br/>
Did over-master. Nor in the city then<br/>
Remained those rites of sepulture, with which<br/>
That pious folk had evermore been wont<br/>
To buried be. For it was wildered all<br/>
In wild alarms, and each and every one<br/>
With sullen sorrow would bury his own dead,<br/>
As present shift allowed. And sudden stress<br/>
And poverty to many an awful act<br/>
Impelled; and with a monstrous screaming they<br/>
Would, on the frames of alien funeral pyres,<br/>
Place their own kin, and thrust the torch beneath<br/>
Oft brawling with much bloodshed round about<br/>
Rather than quit dead bodies loved in life.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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