On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) (16 page)

BOOK: On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics)
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But let’s suppose another man has struck us

 

A violent blow—he’s hit us really hard—

 

And we move forward. That’s quite different.

 

For all the matter then of all the body

 

Clearly against our will is forced to move,

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Until the will has reined limbs back again.

 

Do you see the point? Though many men are driven

 

By an external force, compelled to move

 

Often in headlong rush against their will,

 

Yet in our breasts there’s something that has the power

 

To fight against this force and to resist it.

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At its command at times the mass of matter

 

Is forced to change direction in our limbs,

 

Or, reined back on its way, it comes to rest.

 

The same thing therefore we must admit in atoms:

 

That in addition to their weights and impacts

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There is another separate cause of motion,

 

From which we get this innate power of ours,

 

Since nothing ever can be produced from nothing.

 

For it is weight that prevents all things being caused

 

Simply by external impacts of other atoms.

 

But that within the mind there’s no necessity

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Controlling all its actions, all its movements,

 

Enslaving it and forcing it to suffer—

 

That the minute swerving of atoms causes

 

In neither place nor time determinate.

 

The mass of matter in the universe

 

Was never more tightly packed than it is now,

 

Nor ever set at wider intervals.

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Nothing increases it or is taken away from it.

 

Therefore the motions in which the primal atoms

 

Are now have been the same for ages past,

 

And in like manner they will move hereafter.

 

And things which the ancient custom of the world

 

Has brought to birth will always in like manner

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Be brought to birth, and be and grow and flourish,

 

So far as to each is given by Nature’s laws.

 

No power can ever change the sum of things.

 

No place exists to which any kind of matter

 

Could escape from the universe, nor any place

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From out of which some new force building up

 

Could break into the universe, and change

 

The nature of all things, and reverse their movements.

 

And here’s a thing that need cause no surprise:

 

That though all atoms are in ceaseless motion

 

Their total seems to stand in total rest,

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Except so far as individual objects

 

Make movements by the movements of their bodies.

 

For all the nature of the primal atoms

 

Lies hidden far beneath our senses; therefore since

 

You cannot see them, you cannot see their movements.

 

Indeed things we can see, if some great distance

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Divides them from us, oft conceal their movements.

 

You see sheep on a hillside creeping forward

 

Cropping the fresh green grass new-pearled with dew

 

Where pastures new invite and tempt them on,

 

And fat lambs play and butt and frisk around.

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We see all this confused and blurred by distance,

 

A white patch standing still amid the green.

 

And when in mimic war the mighty legions

 

Fill all the plain with movements far and wide,

 

And sheen of armour rises to the sky;

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Earth flashes with bronze; the tramp of marching feet

 

Resounds on high; the hills struck by the noise

 

Throw back the echoes to the stars of heaven;

 

And wheeling horsemen gallop, and suddenly

 

Charge, and shake all the plain with their attack—

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And yet among high mountains there’s a place

 

From which they seem to stand still, motionless,

 

A flash of brightness on the plain below.

 

Now let us consider the qualities of atoms,

 

The extent to which they differ in their shapes

 

And all the rich variety of their figures.

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Not that there are not many of the same shape,

 

But all by no means are identical.

 

Nor is this strange. For since their multitude

 

As I have shown has neither sum nor end,

 

Not all, for sure, must be the same in build

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As all the rest, nor marked by the same shape.

 

Consider the race of men, and silent shoals

 

Of scaly fish, fat cattle, and wild beasts,

 

And all the varied birds that throng the waters

 

By joyful lakes and streams and river banks,

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And flock and fly among the pathless woods.

 

Take any one you will among its kind,

 

And you will find they all have different shapes.

 

This is the only way the young can know

 

Their mothers, and the mothers know their young.

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And this we see they do; no less than men

 

They recognize each other readily.

 

For oft in front of noble shrines of gods

 

A calf falls slain beside the incensed altars,

 

A stream of hot blood gushing from its breast.

 

The mother wandering through the leafy glens

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Bereaved seeks on the ground the cloven footprints.

 

With questing eyes she seeks if anywhere

 

Her lost child may be seen; she stands, and fills with moaning

 

The woodland glades; she comes back to the byre

 

Time and again in yearning for her calf.

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Nor tender willows nor meadows lush with dew

 

Nor those sweet rivers brimming to their banks

 

Can charm her mind or ease the sudden care,

 

Nor sight of other calves in happy pastures

 

Divert her mind and lift the care away,

 

So does she seek what was her own, her darling,

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So steadfastly the child she knows so well.

 

And tender kids with trembling voices know

 

Their horned mothers well, and playful lambs

 

The bleating ewes. So each as Nature bids

 

To its own udder scampers back for milk.

 

Lastly, consider corn of any kind.

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Not every grain you’ll find is quite the same,

 

But through their shapes there runs some difference.

 

So likewise all the various shells we see

 

Painting the lap of earth, the curving shore

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Where waves beat softly on the thirsty sands.

 

Therefore again and yet again I say

 

That in the same way it must be that atoms,

 

Since they exist by nature and are not made by hand

 

To the fixed pattern of a single atom,

 

Must, some of them, be different in their shapes.

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With this in mind it is easy to explain

 

Why the fire of lightning penetrates much further

 

Than our fire does which springs from earthly torches.

 

For you could say that the heavenly fire of lightning

 

Is finer, being composed of smaller shapes

 

And therefore passes through apertures impassable

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By our fire sprung from wood and lit by torch.

 

Besides, light passes through a pane of horn, but rain

 

Is thrown off. Why? Because the atoms of light

 

Are smaller than those that make life-giving water.

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And though we see wine pass quickly through a strainer,

 

Yet olive oil by contrast lags and lingers;

 

No doubt, either because its atoms are larger

 

Or they are more hooked and more closely interwoven,

 

And therefore cannot separate so quickly

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And trickle through the holes each one by one.

 

And here’s another thing. Honey and milk

 

Rolled in the mouth have a delightful taste;

 

But bitter wormwood and harsh centaury

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Quite screw the face up with their loathsome flavour.

 

So you can easily see that smooth round atoms

 

Make up things which give pleasure to our senses,

 

But, by contrast, things that seem harsh and bitter

 

Are more composed of atoms that are hooked,

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Which therefore tear their way into our senses,

 

And entering break the surface of our bodies.

 

There is conflict between those things that strike the senses

 

As good or bad, because their shapes are different.

 

The strident rasping of a screeching saw

 

You must not think consists of elements

 

As smooth as melodies musicians shape

 

Waking the tuneful lyre with nimble fingers.

 

Nor must you think that atoms of the same shape

 

Enter men’s nostrils when foul corpses burn

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