De Rerum Natura
Lucretius
Lucretius. De Rerum Natura. William Ellery Leonard. E. P. Dutton. 1916.
- And whoso had survived that virulent flow
- Of the vile blood, yet into thews of him
- And into his joints and very genitals
- Would pass the old disease. And some there were,
- Dreading the doorways of destruction
- So much, lived on, deprived by the knife
- Of the male member; not a few, though lopped
- Of hands and feet, would yet persist in life,
- And some there were who lost their eyeballs: O
- So fierce a fear of death had fallen on them!
- And some, besides, were by oblivion
- Of all things seized, that even themselves they knew
- No longer. And though corpse on corpse lay piled
- Unburied on ground, the race of birds and beasts
- Would or spring back, scurrying to escape
- The virulent stench, or, if they'd tasted there,
- Would languish in approaching death. But yet
- Hardly at all during those many suns
- Appeared a fowl, nor from the woods went forth
- The sullen generations of wild beasts-
- They languished with disease and died and died.
- In chief, the faithful dogs, in all the streets
- Outstretched, would yield their breath distressfully
- For so that Influence of bane would twist
- Life from their members. Nor was found one sure
- And universal principle of cure:
- For what to one had given the power to take
- The vital winds of air into his mouth,
- And to gaze upward at the vaults of sky,
- The same to others was their death and doom.
- In those affairs, O awfullest of all,
- O pitiable most was this, was this:
- Whoso once saw himself in that disease
- Entangled, ay, as damned unto death,
- Would lie in wanhope, with a sullen heart,
- Would, in fore-vision of his funeral,
- Give up the ghost, O then and there. For, lo,
- At no time did they cease one from another
- To catch contagion of the greedy plague,-
- As though but woolly flocks and horned herds;
- And this in chief would heap the dead on dead:
- For who forbore to look to their own sick,
- O these (too eager of life, of death afeard)
- Would then, soon after, slaughtering Neglect
- Visit with vengeance of evil death and base-
- Themselves deserted and forlorn of help.
- But who had stayed at hand would perish there
- By that contagion and the toil which then
- A sense of honour and the pleading voice
- Of weary watchers, mixed with voice of wail
- Of dying folk, forced them to undergo.
- This kind of death each nobler soul would meet.
- The funerals, uncompanioned, forsaken,
- Like rivals contended to be hurried through.
- . . . . . .
- And men contending to ensepulchre
- Pile upon pile the throng of their own dead:
- And weary with woe and weeping wandered home;
- And then the most would take to bed from grief.
- Nor could be found not one, whom nor disease
- Nor death, nor woe had not in those dread times
- Attacked.
- By now the shepherds and neatherds all,
- Yea, even the sturdy guiders of curved ploughs,
- Began to sicken, and their bodies would lie
- Huddled within back-corners of their huts,
- Delivered by squalor and disease to death.
- O often and often couldst thou then have seen
- On lifeless children lifeless parents prone,
- Or offspring on their fathers', mothers' corpse
- Yielding the life. And into the city poured
- O not in least part from the countryside
- That tribulation, which the peasantry
- Sick, sick, brought thither, thronging from every quarter,
- Plague-stricken mob. All places would they crowd,
- All buildings too; whereby the more would death
- Up-pile a-heap the folk so crammed in town.
- Ah, many a body thirst had dragged and rolled
- Along the highways there was lying strewn
- Besides Silenus-headed water-fountains,-
- The life-breath choked from that too dear desire
- Of pleasant waters. Ah, everywhere along
- The open places of the populace,
- And along the highways, O thou mightest see
- Of many a half-dead body the sagged limbs,
- Rough with squalor, wrapped around with rags,
- Perish from very nastiness, with naught
- But skin upon the bones, well-nigh already
- Buried- in ulcers vile and obscene filth.
- All holy temples, too, of deities
- Had Death becrammed with the carcasses;
- And stood each fane of the Celestial Ones
- Laden with stark cadavers everywhere-
- Places which warders of the shrines had crowded
- With many a guest. For now no longer men
- Did mightily esteem the old Divine,
- The worship of the gods: the woe at hand
- Did over-master. Nor in the city then
- Remained those rites of sepulture, with which
- That pious folk had evermore been wont
- To buried be. For it was wildered all
- In wild alarms, and each and every one
- With sullen sorrow would bury his own dead,
- As present shift allowed. And sudden stress
- And poverty to many an awful act
- Impelled; and with a monstrous screaming they
- Would, on the frames of alien funeral pyres,
- Place their own kin, and thrust the torch beneath
- Oft brawling with much bloodshed round about
- Rather than quit dead bodies loved in life.