De Rerum Natura
Lucretius
Lucretius. De Rerum Natura. William Ellery Leonard. E. P. Dutton. 1916.
- Whilst human kind
- Throughout the lands lay miserably crushed
- Before all eyes beneath Religion- who
- Would show her head along the region skies,
- Glowering on mortals with her hideous face-
- A Greek it was who first opposing dared
- Raise mortal eyes that terror to withstand,
- Whom nor the fame of Gods nor lightning's stroke
- Nor threatening thunder of the ominous sky
- Abashed; but rather chafed to angry zest
- His dauntless heart to be the first to rend
- The crossbars at the gates of Nature old.
- And thus his will and hardy wisdom won;
- And forward thus he fared afar, beyond
- The flaming ramparts of the world, until
- He wandered the unmeasurable All.
- Whence he to us, a conqueror, reports
- What things can rise to being, what cannot,
- And by what law to each its scope prescribed,
- Its boundary stone that clings so deep in Time.
- Wherefore Religion now is under foot,
- And us his victory now exalts to heaven.
- I fear perhaps thou deemest that we fare
- An impious road to realms of thought profane;
- But 'tis that same religion oftener far
- Hath bred the foul impieties of men:
- As once at Aulis, the elected chiefs,
- Foremost of heroes, Danaan counsellors,
- Defiled Diana's altar, virgin queen,
- With Agamemnon's daughter, foully slain.
- She felt the chaplet round her maiden locks
- And fillets, fluttering down on either cheek,
- And at the altar marked her grieving sire,
- The priests beside him who concealed the knife,
- And all the folk in tears at sight of her.
- With a dumb terror and a sinking knee
- She dropped; nor might avail her now that first
- 'Twas she who gave the king a father's name.
- They raised her up, they bore the trembling girl
- On to the altar- hither led not now
- With solemn rites and hymeneal choir,
- But sinless woman, sinfully foredone,
- A parent felled her on her bridal day,
- Making his child a sacrificial beast
- To give the ships auspicious winds for Troy:
- Such are the crimes to which Religion leads.
- And there shall come the time when even thou,
- Forced by the soothsayer's terror-tales, shalt seek
- To break from us. Ah, many a dream even now
- Can they concoct to rout thy plans of life,
- And trouble all thy fortunes with base fears.
- I own with reason: for, if men but knew
- Some fixed end to ills, they would be strong
- By some device unconquered to withstand
- Religions and the menacings of seers.
- But now nor skill nor instrument is theirs,
- Since men must dread eternal pains in death.
- For what the soul may be they do not know,
- Whether 'tis born, or enter in at birth,
- And whether, snatched by death, it die with us,
- Or visit the shadows and the vasty caves
- Of Orcus, or by some divine decree
- Enter the brute herds, as our Ennius sang,
- Who first from lovely Helicon brought down
- A laurel wreath of bright perennial leaves,
- Renowned forever among the Italian clans.
- Yet Ennius too in everlasting verse
- Proclaims those vaults of Acheron to be,
- Though thence, he said, nor souls nor bodies fare,
- But only phantom figures, strangely wan,
- And tells how once from out those regions rose
- Old Homer's ghost to him and shed salt tears
- And with his words unfolded Nature's source.
- Then be it ours with steady mind to clasp
- The purport of the skies- the law behind
- The wandering courses of the sun and moon;
- To scan the powers that speed all life below;
- But most to see with reasonable eyes
- Of what the mind, of what the soul is made,
- And what it is so terrible that breaks
- On us asleep, or waking in disease,
- Until we seem to mark and hear at hand
- Dead men whose bones earth bosomed long ago.
- I know how hard it is in Latian verse
- To tell the dark discoveries of the Greeks,
- Chiefly because our pauper-speech must find
- Strange terms to fit the strangeness of the thing;
- Yet worth of thine and the expected joy
- Of thy sweet friendship do persuade me on
- To bear all toil and wake the clear nights through,
- Seeking with what of words and what of song
- I may at last most gloriously uncloud
- For thee the light beyond, wherewith to view
- The core of being at the centre hid.
- This terror, then, this darkness of the mind,
- Not sunrise with its flaring spokes of light,
- Nor glittering arrows of morning can disperse,
- But only Nature's aspect and her law,
- Which, teaching us, hath this exordium:
- Nothing from nothing ever yet was born.
- Fear holds dominion over mortality
- Only because, seeing in land and sky
- So much the cause whereof no wise they know,
- Men think Divinities are working there.
- Meantime, when once we know from nothing still
- Nothing can be create, we shall divine
- More clearly what we seek: those elements
- From which alone all things created are,
- And how accomplished by no tool of Gods.
- Suppose all sprang from all things: any kind
- Might take its origin from any thing,
- No fixed seed required. Men from the sea
- Might rise, and from the land the scaly breed,
- And, fowl full fledged come bursting from the sky;
- The horned cattle, the herds and all the wild
- Would haunt with varying offspring tilth and waste;
- Nor would the same fruits keep their olden trees,
- But each might grow from any stock or limb
- By chance and change. Indeed, and were there not
- For each its procreant atoms, could things have
- Each its unalterable mother old?
- But, since produced from fixed seeds are all,
- Each birth goes forth upon the shores of light
- From its own stuff, from its own primal bodies.
- And all from all cannot become, because
- In each resides a secret power its own.
- Again, why see we lavished o'er the lands
- At spring the rose, at summer heat the corn,
- The vines that mellow when the autumn lures,
- If not because the fixed seeds of things
- At their own season must together stream,
- And new creations only be revealed
- When the due times arrive and pregnant earth
- Safely may give unto the shores of light
- Her tender progenies? But if from naught
- Were their becoming, they would spring abroad
- Suddenly, unforeseen, in alien months,
- With no primordial germs, to be preserved
- From procreant unions at an adverse hour.
- Nor on the mingling of the living seeds
- Would space be needed for the growth of things
- Were life an increment of nothing: then
- The tiny babe forthwith would walk a man,
- And from the turf would leap a branching tree-
- Wonders unheard of; for, by Nature, each
- Slowly increases from its lawful seed,
- And through that increase shall conserve its kind.
- Whence take the proof that things enlarge and feed
- From out their proper matter. Thus it comes
- That earth, without her seasons of fixed rains,
- Could bear no produce such as makes us glad,
- And whatsoever lives, if shut from food,
- Prolongs its kind and guards its life no more.
- Thus easier 'tis to hold that many things
- Have primal bodies in common (as we see
- The single letters common to many words)
- Than aught exists without its origins.
- Moreover, why should Nature not prepare
- Men of a bulk to ford the seas afoot,
- Or rend the mighty mountains with their hands,
- Or conquer Time with length of days, if not
- Because for all begotten things abides
- The changeless stuff, and what from that may spring
- Is fixed forevermore? Lastly we see
- How far the tilled surpass the fields untilled
- And to the labour of our hands return
- Their more abounding crops; there are indeed
- Within the earth primordial germs of things,
- Which, as the ploughshare turns the fruitful clods
- And kneads the mould, we quicken into birth.
- Else would ye mark, without all toil of ours,
- Spontaneous generations, fairer forms.
- Confess then, naught from nothing can become,
- Since all must have their seeds, wherefrom to grow,
- Wherefrom to reach the gentle fields of air.
- Hence too it comes that Nature all dissolves
- Into their primal bodies again, and naught
- Perishes ever to annihilation.
- For, were aught mortal in its every part,
- Before our eyes it might be snatched away
- Unto destruction; since no force were needed
- To sunder its members and undo its bands.
- Whereas, of truth, because all things exist,
- With seed imperishable, Nature allows
- Destruction nor collapse of aught, until
- Some outward force may shatter by a blow,
- Or inward craft, entering its hollow cells,
- Dissolve it down. And more than this, if Time,
- That wastes with eld the works along the world,
- Destroy entire, consuming matter all,
- Whence then may Venus back to light of life
- Restore the generations kind by kind?
- Or how, when thus restored, may daedal Earth
- Foster and plenish with her ancient food,
- Which, kind by kind, she offers unto each?
- Whence may the water-springs, beneath the sea,
- Or inland rivers, far and wide away,
- Keep the unfathomable ocean full?
- And out of what does Ether feed the stars?
- For lapsed years and infinite age must else
- Have eat all shapes of mortal stock away:
- But be it the Long Ago contained those germs,
- By which this sum of things recruited lives,
- Those same infallibly can never die,
- Nor nothing to nothing evermore return.
- And, too, the selfsame power might end alike
- All things, were they not still together held
- By matter eternal, shackled through its parts,
- Now more, now less. A touch might be enough
- To cause destruction. For the slightest force
- Would loose the weft of things wherein no part
- Were of imperishable stock. But now
- Because the fastenings of primordial parts
- Are put together diversely and stuff
- Is everlasting, things abide the same
- Unhurt and sure, until some power comes on
- Strong to destroy the warp and woof of each:
- Nothing returns to naught; but all return
- At their collapse to primal forms of stuff.
- Lo, the rains perish which Ether-father throws
- Down to the bosom of Earth-mother; but then
- Upsprings the shining grain, and boughs are green
- Amid the trees, and trees themselves wax big
- And lade themselves with fruits; and hence in turn
- The race of man and all the wild are fed;
- Hence joyful cities thrive with boys and girls;
- And leafy woodlands echo with new birds;
- Hence cattle, fat and drowsy, lay their bulk
- Along the joyous pastures whilst the drops
- Of white ooze trickle from distended bags;
- Hence the young scamper on their weakling joints
- Along the tender herbs, fresh hearts afrisk
- With warm new milk. Thus naught of what so seems
- Perishes utterly, since Nature ever
- Upbuilds one thing from other, suffering naught
- To come to birth but through some other's death.
- . . . . . .
- And now, since I have taught that things cannot
- Be born from nothing, nor the same, when born,
- To nothing be recalled, doubt not my words,
- Because our eyes no primal germs perceive;
- For mark those bodies which, though known to be
- In this our world, are yet invisible:
- The winds infuriate lash our face and frame,
- Unseen, and swamp huge ships and rend the clouds,
- Or, eddying wildly down, bestrew the plains
- With mighty trees, or scour the mountain tops
- With forest-crackling blasts. Thus on they rave
- With uproar shrill and ominous moan. The winds,
- 'Tis clear, are sightless bodies sweeping through
- The sea, the lands, the clouds along the sky,
- Vexing and whirling and seizing all amain;
- And forth they flow and pile destruction round,
- Even as the water's soft and supple bulk
- Becoming a river of abounding floods,
- Which a wide downpour from the lofty hills
- Swells with big showers, dashes headlong down
- Fragments of woodland and whole branching trees;
- Nor can the solid bridges bide the shock
- As on the waters whelm: the turbulent stream,
- Strong with a hundred rains, beats round the piers,
- Crashes with havoc, and rolls beneath its waves
- Down-toppled masonry and ponderous stone,
- Hurling away whatever would oppose.
- Even so must move the blasts of all the winds,
- Which, when they spread, like to a mighty flood,
- Hither or thither, drive things on before
- And hurl to ground with still renewed assault,
- Or sometimes in their circling vortex seize
- And bear in cones of whirlwind down the world:
- The winds are sightless bodies and naught else-
- Since both in works and ways they rival well
- The mighty rivers, the visible in form.
- Then too we know the varied smells of things
- Yet never to our nostrils see them come;
- With eyes we view not burning heats, nor cold,
- Nor are we wont men's voices to behold.
- Yet these must be corporeal at the base,
- Since thus they smite the senses: naught there is
- Save body, having property of touch.
- And raiment, hung by surf-beat shore, grows moist,
- The same, spread out before the sun, will dry;
- Yet no one saw how sank the moisture in,
- Nor how by heat off-driven. Thus we know,
- That moisture is dispersed about in bits
- Too small for eyes to see. Another case:
- A ring upon the finger thins away
- Along the under side, with years and suns;
- The drippings from the eaves will scoop the stone;
- The hooked ploughshare, though of iron, wastes
- Amid the fields insidiously. We view
- The rock-paved highways worn by many feet;
- And at the gates the brazen statues show
- Their right hands leaner from the frequent touch
- Of wayfarers innumerable who greet.
- We see how wearing-down hath minished these,
- But just what motes depart at any time,
- The envious nature of vision bars our sight.
- Lastly whatever days and nature add
- Little by little, constraining things to grow
- In due proportion, no gaze however keen
- Of these our eyes hath watched and known. No more
- Can we observe what's lost at any time,
- When things wax old with eld and foul decay,
- Or when salt seas eat under beetling crags.
- Thus Nature ever by unseen bodies works.
- But yet creation's neither crammed nor blocked
- About by body: there's in things a void-
- Which to have known will serve thee many a turn,
- Nor will not leave thee wandering in doubt,
- Forever searching in the sum of all,
- And losing faith in these pronouncements mine.
- There's place intangible, a void and room.
- For were it not, things could in nowise move;
- Since body's property to block and check
- Would work on all and at an times the same.
- Thus naught could evermore push forth and go,
- Since naught elsewhere would yield a starting place.
- But now through oceans, lands, and heights of heaven,
- By divers causes and in divers modes,
- Before our eyes we mark how much may move,
- Which, finding not a void, would fail deprived
- Of stir and motion; nay, would then have been
- Nowise begot at all, since matter, then,
- Had staid at rest, its parts together crammed.
- Then too, however solid objects seem,
- They yet are formed of matter mixed with void:
- In rocks and caves the watery moisture seeps,
- And beady drops stand out like plenteous tears;
- And food finds way through every frame that lives;
- The trees increase and yield the season's fruit
- Because their food throughout the whole is poured,
- Even from the deepest roots, through trunks and boughs;
- And voices pass the solid walls and fly
- Reverberant through shut doorways of a house;
- And stiffening frost seeps inward to our bones.
- Which but for voids for bodies to go through
- 'Tis clear could happen in nowise at all.
- Again, why see we among objects some
- Of heavier weight, but of no bulkier size?
- Indeed, if in a ball of wool there be
- As much of body as in lump of lead,
- The two should weigh alike, since body tends
- To load things downward, while the void abides,
- By contrary nature, the imponderable.
- Therefore, an object just as large but lighter
- Declares infallibly its more of void;
- Even as the heavier more of matter shows,
- And how much less of vacant room inside.
- That which we're seeking with sagacious quest
- Exists, infallibly, commixed with things-
- The void, the invisible inane.
- Right here
- I am compelled a question to expound,
- Forestalling something certain folk suppose,
- Lest it avail to lead thee off from truth:
- Waters (they say) before the shining breed
- Of the swift scaly creatures somehow give,
- And straightway open sudden liquid paths,
- Because the fishes leave behind them room
- To which at once the yielding billows stream.
- Thus things among themselves can yet be moved,
- And change their place, however full the Sum-
- Received opinion, wholly false forsooth.
- For where can scaly creatures forward dart,
- Save where the waters give them room? Again,
- Where can the billows yield a way, so long
- As ever the fish are powerless to go?
- Thus either all bodies of motion are deprived,
- Or things contain admixture of a void
- Where each thing gets its start in moving on.
- Lastly, where after impact two broad bodies
- Suddenly spring apart, the air must crowd
- The whole new void between those bodies formed;
- But air, however it stream with hastening gusts,
- Can yet not fill the gap at once- for first
- It makes for one place, ere diffused through all.
- And then, if haply any think this comes,
- When bodies spring apart, because the air
- Somehow condenses, wander they from truth:
- For then a void is formed, where none before;
- And, too, a void is filled which was before.
- Nor can air be condensed in such a wise;
- Nor, granting it could, without a void, I hold,
- It still could not contract upon itself
- And draw its parts together into one.
- Wherefore, despite demur and counter-speech,
- Confess thou must there is a void in things.
- And still I might by many an argument
- Here scrape together credence for my words.
- But for the keen eye these mere footprints serve,
- Whereby thou mayest know the rest thyself.
- As dogs full oft with noses on the ground,
- Find out the silent lairs, though hid in brush,
- Of beasts, the mountain-rangers, when but once
- They scent the certain footsteps of the way,
- Thus thou thyself in themes like these alone
- Can hunt from thought to thought, and keenly wind
- Along even onward to the secret places
- And drag out truth. But, if thou loiter loth
- Or veer, however little, from the point,
- This I can promise, Memmius, for a fact:
- Such copious drafts my singing tongue shall pour
- From the large well-springs of my plenished breast
- That much I dread slow age will steal and coil
- Along our members, and unloose the gates
- Of life within us, ere for thee my verse
- Hath put within thine ears the stores of proofs
- At hand for one soever question broached.
- But, now again to weave the tale begun,
- All nature, then, as self-sustained, consists
- Of twain of things: of bodies and of void
- In which they're set, and where they're moved around.
- For common instinct of our race declares
- That body of itself exists: unless
- This primal faith, deep-founded, fail us not,
- Naught will there be whereunto to appeal
- On things occult when seeking aught to prove
- By reasonings of mind. Again, without
- That place and room, which we do call the inane,
- Nowhere could bodies then be set, nor go
- Hither or thither at all- as shown before.
- Besides, there's naught of which thou canst declare
- It lives disjoined from body, shut from void-
- A kind of third in nature. For whatever
- Exists must be a somewhat; and the same,
- If tangible, however fight and slight,
- Will yet increase the count of body's sum,
- With its own augmentation big or small;
- But, if intangible and powerless ever
- To keep a thing from passing through itself
- On any side, 'twill be naught else but that
- Which we do call the empty, the inane.
- Again, whate'er exists, as of itself,
- Must either act or suffer action on it,
- Or else be that wherein things move and be:
- Naught, saving body, acts, is acted on;
- Naught but the inane can furnish room. And thus,
- Beside the inane and bodies, is no third
- Nature amid the number of all things-
- Remainder none to fall at any time
- Under our senses, nor be seized and seen
- By any man through reasonings of mind.
- Name o'er creation with what names thou wilt,
- Thou'lt find but properties of those first twain,
- Or see but accidents those twain produce.
- A property is that which not at all
- Can be disjoined and severed from a thing
- Without a fatal dissolution: such,
- Weight to the rocks, heat to the fire, and flow
- To the wide waters, touch to corporal things,
- Intangibility to the viewless void.
- But state of slavery, pauperhood, and wealth,
- Freedom, and war, and concord, and all else
- Which come and go whilst nature stands the same,
- We're wont, and rightly, to call accidents.
- Even time exists not of itself; but sense
- Reads out of things what happened long ago,
- What presses now, and what shall follow after:
- No man, we must admit, feels time itself,
- Disjoined from motion and repose of things.
- Thus, when they say there "is" the ravishment
- Of Princess Helen, "is" the siege and sack
- Of Trojan Town, look out, they force us not
- To admit these acts existent by themselves,
- Merely because those races of mankind
- (Of whom these acts were accidents) long since
- Irrevocable age has borne away:
- For all past actions may be said to be
- But accidents, in one way, of mankind,-
- In other, of some region of the world.
- Add, too, had been no matter, and no room
- Wherein all things go on, the fire of love
- Upblown by that fair form, the glowing coal
- Under the Phrygian Alexander's breast,
- Had ne'er enkindled that renowned strife
- Of savage war, nor had the wooden horse
- Involved in flames old Pergama, by a birth
- At midnight of a brood of the Hellenes.
- And thus thou canst remark that every act
- At bottom exists not of itself, nor is
- As body is, nor has like name with void;
- But rather of sort more fitly to be called
- An accident of body, and of place
- Wherein all things go on.
- Bodies, again,
- Are partly primal germs of things, and partly
- Unions deriving from the primal germs.
- And those which are the primal germs of things
- No power can quench; for in the end they conquer
- By their own solidness; though hard it be
- To think that aught in things has solid frame;
- For lightnings pass, no less than voice and shout,
- Through hedging walls of houses, and the iron
- White-dazzles in the fire, and rocks will burn
- With exhalations fierce and burst asunder.
- Totters the rigid gold dissolved in heat;
- The ice of bronze melts conquered in the flame;
- Warmth and the piercing cold through silver seep,
- Since, with the cups held rightly in the hand,
- We oft feel both, as from above is poured
- The dew of waters between their shining sides:
- So true it is no solid form is found.
- But yet because true reason and nature of things
- Constrain us, come, whilst in few verses now
- I disentangle how there still exist
- Bodies of solid, everlasting frame-
- The seeds of things, the primal germs we teach,
- Whence all creation around us came to be.
- First since we know a twofold nature exists,
- Of things, both twain and utterly unlike-
- Body, and place in which an things go on-
- Then each must be both for and through itself,
- And all unmixed: where'er be empty space,
- There body's not; and so where body bides,
- There not at all exists the void inane.
- Thus primal bodies are solid, without a void.
- But since there's void in all begotten things,
- All solid matter must be round the same;
- Nor, by true reason canst thou prove aught hides
- And holds a void within its body, unless
- Thou grant what holds it be a solid. Know,
- That which can hold a void of things within
- Can be naught else than matter in union knit.
- Thus matter, consisting of a solid frame,
- Hath power to be eternal, though all else,
- Though all creation, be dissolved away.
- Again, were naught of empty and inane,
- The world were then a solid; as, without
- Some certain bodies to fill the places held,
- The world that is were but a vacant void.
- And so, infallibly, alternate-wise
- Body and void are still distinguished,
- Since nature knows no wholly full nor void.
- There are, then, certain bodies, possessed of power
- To vary forever the empty and the full;
- And these can nor be sundered from without
- By beats and blows, nor from within be torn
- By penetration, nor be overthrown
- By any assault soever through the world-
- For without void, naught can be crushed, it seems,
- Nor broken, nor severed by a cut in twain,
- Nor can it take the damp, or seeping cold
- Or piercing fire, those old destroyers three;
- But the more void within a thing, the more
- Entirely it totters at their sure assault.
- Thus if first bodies be, as I have taught,
- Solid, without a void, they must be then
- Eternal; and, if matter ne'er had been
- Eternal, long ere now had all things gone
- Back into nothing utterly, and all
- We see around from nothing had been born-
- But since I taught above that naught can be
- From naught created, nor the once begotten
- To naught be summoned back, these primal germs
- Must have an immortality of frame.
- And into these must each thing be resolved,
- When comes its supreme hour, that thus there be
- At hand the stuff for plenishing the world.
- . . . . . .
- So primal germs have solid singleness
- Nor otherwise could they have been conserved
- Through aeons and infinity of time
- For the replenishment of wasted worlds.
- Once more, if nature had given a scope for things
- To be forever broken more and more,
- By now the bodies of matter would have been
- So far reduced by breakings in old days
- That from them nothing could, at season fixed,
- Be born, and arrive its prime and top of life.
- For, lo, each thing is quicker marred than made;
- And so whate'er the long infinitude
- Of days and all fore-passed time would now
- By this have broken and ruined and dissolved,
- That same could ne'er in all remaining time
- Be builded up for plenishing the world.
- But mark: infallibly a fixed bound
- Remaineth stablished 'gainst their breaking down;
- Since we behold each thing soever renewed,
- And unto all, their seasons, after their kind,
- Wherein they arrive the flower of their age.
- Again, if bounds have not been set against
- The breaking down of this corporeal world,
- Yet must all bodies of whatever things
- Have still endured from everlasting time
- Unto this present, as not yet assailed
- By shocks of peril. But because the same
- Are, to thy thinking, of a nature frail,
- It ill accords that thus they could remain
- (As thus they do) through everlasting time,
- Vexed through the ages (as indeed they are)
- By the innumerable blows of chance.
- So in our programme of creation, mark
- How 'tis that, though the bodies of all stuff
- Are solid to the core, we yet explain
- The ways whereby some things are fashioned soft-
- Air, water, earth, and fiery exhalations-
- And by what force they function and go on:
- The fact is founded in the void of things.
- But if the primal germs themselves be soft,
- Reason cannot be brought to bear to show
- The ways whereby may be created these
- Great crags of basalt and the during iron;
- For their whole nature will profoundly lack
- The first foundations of a solid frame.
- But powerful in old simplicity,
- Abide the solid, the primeval germs;
- And by their combinations more condensed,
- All objects can be tightly knit and bound
- And made to show unconquerable strength.
- Again, since all things kind by kind obtain
- Fixed bounds of growing and conserving life;
- Since Nature hath inviolably decreed
- What each can do, what each can never do;
- Since naught is changed, but all things so abide
- That ever the variegated birds reveal
- The spots or stripes peculiar to their kind,
- Spring after spring: thus surely all that is
- Must be composed of matter immutable.
- For if the primal germs in any wise
- Were open to conquest and to change, 'twould be
- Uncertain also what could come to birth
- And what could not, and by what law to each
- Its scope prescribed, its boundary stone that clings
- So deep in Time. Nor could the generations
- Kind after kind so often reproduce
- The nature, habits, motions, ways of life,
- Of their progenitors.
- And then again,
- Since there is ever an extreme bounding point
- . . . . . .
- Of that first body which our senses now
- Cannot perceive: That bounding point indeed
- Exists without all parts, a minimum
- Of nature, nor was e'er a thing apart,
- As of itself,- nor shall hereafter be,
- Since 'tis itself still parcel of another,
- A first and single part, whence other parts
- And others similar in order lie
- In a packed phalanx, filling to the full
- The nature of first body: being thus
- Not self-existent, they must cleave to that
- From which in nowise they can sundered be.
- So primal germs have solid singleness,
- Which tightly packed and closely joined cohere
- By virtue of their minim particles-
- No compound by mere union of the same;
- But strong in their eternal singleness,
- Nature, reserving them as seeds for things,
- Permitteth naught of rupture or decrease.
- Moreover, were there not a minimum,
- The smallest bodies would have infinites,
- Since then a half-of-half could still be halved,
- With limitless division less and less.
- Then what the difference 'twixt the sum and least?
- None: for however infinite the sum,
- Yet even the smallest would consist the same
- Of infinite parts. But since true reason here
- Protests, denying that the mind can think it,
- Convinced thou must confess such things there are
- As have no parts, the minimums of nature.
- And since these are, likewise confess thou must
- That primal bodies are solid and eterne.
- Again, if Nature, creatress of all things,
- Were wont to force all things to be resolved
- Unto least parts, then would she not avail
- To reproduce from out them anything;
- Because whate'er is not endowed with parts
- Cannot possess those properties required
- Of generative stuff- divers connections,
- Weights, blows, encounters, motions, whereby things
- Forevermore have being and go on.
- And on such grounds it is that those who held
- The stuff of things is fire, and out of fire
- Alone the cosmic sum is formed, are seen
- Mightily from true reason to have lapsed.
- Of whom, chief leader to do battle, comes
- That Heraclitus, famous for dark speech
- Among the silly, not the serious Greeks
- Who search for truth. For dolts are ever prone
- That to bewonder and adore which hides
- Beneath distorted words, holding that true
- Which sweetly tickles in their stupid ears,
- Or which is rouged in finely finished phrase.
- For how, I ask, can things so varied be,
- If formed of fire, single and pure? No whit
- 'Twould help for fire to be condensed or thinned,
- If all the parts of fire did still preserve
- But fire's own nature, seen before in gross.
- The heat were keener with the parts compressed,
- Milder, again, when severed or dispersed-
- And more than this thou canst conceive of naught
- That from such causes could become; much less
- Might earth's variety of things be born
- From any fires soever, dense or rare.
- This too: if they suppose a void in things,
- Then fires can be condensed and still left rare;
- But since they see such opposites of thought
- Rising against them, and are loath to leave
- An unmixed void in things, they fear the steep
- And lose the road of truth. Nor do they see,
- That, if from things we take away the void,
- All things are then condensed, and out of all
- One body made, which has no power to dart
- Swiftly from out itself not anything-
- As throws the fire its light and warmth around,
- Giving thee proof its parts are not compact.
- But if perhaps they think, in other wise,
- Fires through their combinations can be quenched
- And change their substance, very well: behold,
- If fire shall spare to do so in no part,
- Then heat will perish utterly and all,
- And out of nothing would the world be formed.
- For change in anything from out its bounds
- Means instant death of that which was before;
- And thus a somewhat must persist unharmed
- Amid the world, lest all return to naught,
- And, born from naught, abundance thrive anew.
- Now since indeed there are those surest bodies
- Which keep their nature evermore the same,
- Upon whose going out and coming in
- And changed order things their nature change,
- And all corporeal substances transformed,
- 'Tis thine to know those primal bodies, then,
- Are not of fire. For 'twere of no avail
- Should some depart and go away, and some
- Be added new, and some be changed in order,
- If still all kept their nature of old heat:
- For whatsoever they created then
- Would still in any case be only fire.
- The truth, I fancy, this: bodies there are
- Whose clashings, motions, order, posture, shapes
- Produce the fire and which, by order changed,
- Do change the nature of the thing produced,
- And are thereafter nothing like to fire
- Nor whatso else has power to send its bodies
- With impact touching on the senses' touch.
- Again, to say that all things are but fire
- And no true thing in number of all things
- Exists but fire, as this same fellow says,
- Seems crazed folly. For the man himself
- Against the senses by the senses fights,
- And hews at that through which is all belief,
- Through which indeed unto himself is known
- The thing he calls the fire. For, though he thinks
- The senses truly can perceive the fire,
- He thinks they cannot as regards all else,
- Which still are palpably as clear to sense-
- To me a thought inept and crazy too.
- For whither shall we make appeal? for what
- More certain than our senses can there be
- Whereby to mark asunder error and truth?
- Besides, why rather do away with all,
- And wish to allow heat only, then deny
- The fire and still allow all else to be?-
- Alike the madness either way it seems.
- Thus whosoe'er have held the stuff of things
- To be but fire, and out of fire the sum,
- And whosoever have constituted air
- As first beginning of begotten things,
- And all whoever have held that of itself
- Water alone contrives things, or that earth
- Createth all and changes things anew
- To divers natures, mightily they seem
- A long way to have wandered from the truth.
- Add, too, whoever make the primal stuff
- Twofold, by joining air to fire, and earth
- To water; add who deem that things can grow
- Out of the four- fire, earth, and breath, and rain;
- As first Empedocles of Acragas,
- Whom that three-cornered isle of all the lands
- Bore on her coasts, around which flows and flows
- In mighty bend and bay the Ionic seas,
- Splashing the brine from off their gray-green waves.
- Here, billowing onward through the narrow straits,
- Swift ocean cuts her boundaries from the shores
- Of the Italic mainland. Here the waste
- Charybdis; and here Aetna rumbles threats
- To gather anew such furies of its flames
- As with its force anew to vomit fires,
- Belched from its throat, and skyward bear anew
- Its lightnings' flash. And though for much she seem
- The mighty and the wondrous isle to men,
- Most rich in all good things, and fortified
- With generous strength of heroes, she hath ne'er
- Possessed within her aught of more renown,
- Nor aught more holy, wonderful, and dear
- Than this true man. Nay, ever so far and pure
- The lofty music of his breast divine
- Lifts up its voice and tells of glories found,
- That scarce he seems of human stock create.
- Yet he and those forementioned (known to be
- So far beneath him, less than he in all),
- Though, as discoverers of much goodly truth,
- They gave, as 'twere from out of the heart's own shrine,
- Responses holier and soundlier based
- Than ever the Pythia pronounced for men
- From out the triped and the Delphian laurel,
- Have still in matter of first-elements
- Made ruin of themselves, and, great men, great
- Indeed and heavy there for them the fall:
- First, because, banishing the void from things,
- They yet assign them motion, and allow
- Things soft and loosely textured to exist,
- As air, dew, fire, earth, animals, and grains,
- Without admixture of void amid their frame.
- Next, because, thinking there can be no end
- In cutting bodies down to less and less
- Nor pause established to their breaking up,
- They hold there is no minimum in things;
- Albeit we see the boundary point of aught
- Is that which to our senses seems its least,
- Whereby thou mayst conjecture, that, because
- The things thou canst not mark have boundary points,
- They surely have their minimums. Then, too,
- Since these philosophers ascribe to things
- Soft primal germs, which we behold to be
- Of birth and body mortal, thus, throughout,
- The sum of things must be returned to naught,
- And, born from naught, abundance thrive anew-
- Thou seest how far each doctrine stands from truth.
- And, next, these bodies are among themselves
- In many ways poisons and foes to each,
- Wherefore their congress will destroy them quite
- Or drive asunder as we see in storms
- Rains, winds, and lightnings all asunder fly.
- Thus too, if all things are create of four,
- And all again dissolved into the four,
- How can the four be called the primal germs
- Of things, more than all things themselves be thought,
- By retroversion, primal germs of them?
- For ever alternately are both begot,
- With interchange of nature and aspect
- From immemorial time. But if percase
- Thou think'st the frame of fire and earth, the air,
- The dew of water can in such wise meet
- As not by mingling to resign their nature,
- From them for thee no world can be create-
- No thing of breath, no stock or stalk of tree:
- In the wild congress of this varied heap
- Each thing its proper nature will display,
- And air will palpably be seen mixed up
- With earth together, unquenched heat with water.
- But primal germs in bringing things to birth
- Must have a latent, unseen quality,
- Lest some outstanding alien element
- Confuse and minish in the thing create
- Its proper being.
- But these men begin
- From heaven, and from its fires; and first they feign
- That fire will turn into the winds of air,
- Next, that from air the rain begotten is,
- And earth created out of rain, and then
- That all, reversely, are returned from earth-
- The moisture first, then air thereafter heat-
- And that these same ne'er cease in interchange,
- To go their ways from heaven to earth, from earth
- Unto the stars of the aethereal world-
- Which in no wise at all the germs can do.
- Since an immutable somewhat still must be,
- Lest all things utterly be sped to naught;
- For change in anything from out its bounds
- Means instant death of that which was before.
- Wherefore, since those things, mentioned heretofore,
- Suffer a changed state, they must derive
- From others ever unconvertible,
- Lest an things utterly return to naught.
- Then why not rather presuppose there be
- Bodies with such a nature furnished forth
- That, if perchance they have created fire,
- Can still (by virtue of a few withdrawn,
- Or added few, and motion and order changed)
- Fashion the winds of air, and thus all things
- Forevermore be interchanged with all?
- "But facts in proof are manifest," thou sayest,
- "That all things grow into the winds of air
- And forth from earth are nourished, and unless
- The season favour at propitious hour
- With rains enough to set the trees a-reel
- Under the soak of bulking thunderheads,
- And sun, for its share, foster and give heat,
- No grains, nor trees, nor breathing things can grow."
- True- and unless hard food and moisture soft
- Recruited man, his frame would waste away,
- And life dissolve from out his thews and bones;
- For out of doubt recruited and fed are we
- By certain things, as other things by others.
- Because in many ways the many germs
- Common to many things are mixed in things,
- No wonder 'tis that therefore divers things
- By divers things are nourished. And, again,
- Often it matters vastly with what others,
- In what positions the primordial germs
- Are bound together, and what motions, too,
- They give and get among themselves; for these
- Same germs do put together sky, sea, lands,
- Rivers, and sun, grains, trees, and breathing things,
- But yet commixed they are in divers modes
- With divers things, forever as they move.
- Nay, thou beholdest in our verses here
- Elements many, common to many worlds,
- Albeit thou must confess each verse, each word
- From one another differs both in sense
- And ring of sound- so much the elements
- Can bring about by change of order alone.
- But those which are the primal germs of things
- Have power to work more combinations still,
- Whence divers things can be produced in turn.
- Now let us also take for scrutiny
- The homeomeria of Anaxagoras,
- So called by Greeks, for which our pauper-speech
- Yieldeth no name in the Italian tongue,
- Although the thing itself is not o'erhard
- For explanation. First, then, when he speaks
- Of this homeomeria of things, he thinks
- Bones to be sprung from littlest bones minute,
- And from minute and littlest flesh all flesh,
- And blood created out of drops of blood,
- Conceiving gold compact of grains of gold,
- And earth concreted out of bits of earth,
- Fire made of fires, and water out of waters,
- Feigning the like with all the rest of stuff.
- Yet he concedes not any void in things,
- Nor any limit to cutting bodies down.
- Wherefore to me he seems on both accounts
- To err no less than those we named before.
- Add too: these germs he feigns are far too frail-
- If they be germs primordial furnished forth
- With but same nature as the things themselves,
- And travail and perish equally with those,
- And no rein curbs them from annihilation.
- For which will last against the grip and crush
- Under the teeth of death? the fire? the moist?
- Or else the air? which then? the blood? the bones?
- No one, methinks, when every thing will be
- At bottom as mortal as whate'er we mark
- To perish by force before our gazing eyes.
- But my appeal is to the proofs above
- That things cannot fall back to naught, nor yet
- From naught increase. And now again, since food
- Augments and nourishes the human frame,
- 'Tis thine to know our veins and blood and bones
- And thews are formed of particles unlike
- To them in kind; or if they say all foods
- Are of mixed substance having in themselves
- Small bodies of thews, and bones, and also veins
- And particles of blood, then every food,
- Solid or liquid, must itself be thought
- As made and mixed of things unlike in kind-
- Of bones, of thews, of ichor and of blood.
- Again, if all the bodies which upgrow
- From earth, are first within the earth, then earth
- Must be compound of alien substances.
- Which spring and bloom abroad from out the earth.
- Transfer the argument, and thou may'st use
- The selfsame words: if flame and smoke and ash
- Still lurk unseen within the wood, the wood
- Must be compound of alien substances
- Which spring from out the wood.
- Right here remains
- A certain slender means to skulk from truth,
- Which Anaxagoras takes unto himself,
- Who holds that all things lurk commixed with all
- While that one only comes to view, of which
- The bodies exceed in number all the rest,
- And lie more close to hand and at the fore-
- A notion banished from true reason far.
- For then 'twere meet that kernels of the grains
- Should oft, when crunched between the might of stones,
- Give forth a sign of blood, or of aught else
- Which in our human frame is fed; and that
- Rock rubbed on rock should yield a gory ooze.
- Likewise the herbs ought oft to give forth drops
- Of sweet milk, flavoured like the uddered sheep's;
- Indeed we ought to find, when crumbling up
- The earthy clods, there herbs, and grains, and leaves,
- All sorts dispersed minutely in the soil;
- Lastly we ought to find in cloven wood
- Ashes and smoke and bits of fire there hid.
- But since fact teaches this is not the case,
- 'Tis thine to know things are not mixed with things
- Thuswise; but seeds, common to many things,
- Commixed in many ways, must lurk in things.
- "But often it happens on skiey hills" thou sayest,
- "That neighbouring tops of lofty trees are rubbed
- One against other, smote by the blustering south,
- Till all ablaze with bursting flower of flame."
- Good sooth- yet fire is not ingraft in wood,
- But many are the seeds of heat, and when
- Rubbing together they together flow,
- They start the conflagrations in the forests.
- Whereas if flame, already fashioned, lay
- Stored up within the forests, then the fires
- Could not for any time be kept unseen,
- But would be laying all the wildwood waste
- And burning all the boscage. Now dost see
- (Even as we said a little space above)
- How mightily it matters with what others,
- In what positions these same primal germs
- Are bound together? And what motions, too,
- They give and get among themselves? how, hence,
- The same, if altered 'mongst themselves, can body
- Both igneous and ligneous objects forth-
- Precisely as these words themselves are made
- By somewhat altering their elements,
- Although we mark with name indeed distinct
- The igneous from the ligneous. Once again,
- If thou suppose whatever thou beholdest,
- Among all visible objects, cannot be,
- Unless thou feign bodies of matter endowed
- With a like nature,- by thy vain device
- For thee will perish all the germs of things:
- 'Twill come to pass they'll laugh aloud, like men,
- Shaken asunder by a spasm of mirth,
- Or moisten with salty tear-drops cheeks and chins.