On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) (53 page)

BOOK: On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics)
6.85Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

In this way we must think that heaven and earth

665

Are from the infinite supplied with all that’s needed

 

For earth to move and quake in sudden shock

 

And the swift whirlwind scour the land and sea,

 

The fires of Etna flow, the sky to flame.

 

For this does happen, and the realms of heaven

670

Are set on fire; and a heavier fall

 

Of rain storms down, when by some chance the atoms

 

Of water have been massed and concentrated.

 

‘But surely this tumultuous conflagration

 

Is much too huge for such an origin.’

 

Well, any river may appear immense

 

To a man who has never seen a greater one;

675

So does a tree or a man; and everything,

 

When a man has seen no larger, he thinks vast.

 

But all these things, with earth and sea and sky

 

Added together, are as nothing compared

 

With the sum total of the universe.

 

Now, none the less, I shall explain the ways

680

In which the flame excited suddenly

 

Blasts out from Etna’s mighty furnaces.

 

First, the whole mountain is hollow underneath,

 

Supported mostly on caverns in the rock.

 

In all the caves there is both air and wind;

 

For air makes wind when strongly agitated.

685

Now when the wind has grown extremely hot,

 

And heated in fury all the rocks around

 

Wherever it touches, and also the earth,

 

And struck from them hot fires and rushing flames,

 

It rises, and straight through the mountain’s throat

 

Hurls itself upward in a mighty blast.

 

Then far and wide the heat is spread, and wide

690

The fall of ashes; and in darkness thick

 

It rolls its smoke, and all the while throws out

 

Rocks of amazing weight. Beyond a doubt

 

This is the work of wind most turbulent.

 

Besides, for a space of many miles the sea

 

Breaks on the mountain’s roots, sucks back its waves,

695

And from this sea caves spread out underneath

 

Right to the deep throat of the mountain, and through these

 

It cannot be doubted that wind mixed with water

 

Comes in from the open sea and penetrates it

 

Deeply within, thus causing an explosion

 

And upward blast of flame, throwing out rocks

 

And raising everywhere great clouds of sand.

700

For on the topmost summit there are craters,

 

The ‘mixing bowls’ as the Sicilians call them,

 

To which we give the name of throats or mouths.

 

There is also a number of things for which

 

It is not enough to state one cause; we must

 

Consider many, and one of them is right.

 

For example, if from a distance you should see

 

The lifeless body of some man, then all

705

The causes of death you might think well to mention,

 

So that the one true cause of it be named.

 

For though you could not prove that steel or cold

 

Had caused his death, or disease perhaps, or poison,

 

We know quite well that what has happened to him

710

Is something of this kind. And so we shall

 

In many cases argue in this way.

 

The Nile, the river of all Egypt, swells

 

And flows across the fields in summertime,

 

Unique among the rivers of the world.

 

It waters Egypt through midsummer heats,

 

Either because North winds oppose its mouth

715

In summer, which blowing at that time of year

 

Are called Etesian, or ‘seasonal’;

 

These blowing against the stream arrest its flow,

 

And piling up the water fill its banks

 

And hold up its advance; for there’s no doubt

 

That these blasts coming from the Pole’s cold star

720

Do blow against the current of the river.

 

For the great Nile comes from the land of heat,

 

The south, where deep among the race of men

 

Burnt black by sun it rises from the noonday.

 

It may be also that a great sandbar

 

Is heaped against the river’s mouths, confronting the flow

725

When the sea driven strongly by the winds

 

Rolls the sand shorewards. In this way the river

 

Has less freedom of exit, and the current

 

Has a less easy downflow to the sea.

 

Or it may be perhaps that heavier rains

 

Fall on its source at the season of the year

 

When the Etesian breezes of the north

730

Drive all the clouds into those parts together.

 

You may be sure that when they have massed together

 

Driven out towards the region of the noonday

 

There they at length beating against high mountains

 

Are crushed and with great violence compressed.

 

Or deep within the Ethiopian highlands

735

Perhaps the river grows, when the hot sun

 

Traversing all things with his burning rays

 

Makes the white snows run down into the plains.

 

I shall now explain the nature of the lakes

 

And other places that are called Avernian.

 

Firstly, the name Avernian is given

740

Because no birds can live within these places.

 

For any birds that fly directly above them,

 

Their wings’ oars all forgotten and the sails

 

Let loose, and neck all limp and lifeless,

 

Down they fall headlong to the ground,

 

If it so happens that earth lies below,

745

Or into the water, if perchance a lake

 

Of Avernus lies outspread. There is near Cumae

 

A place like this, where the hills filled with sulphur

 

Give off a pungent smoke fed by hot springs.

 

There is another within the walls of Athens

 

Right at the summit of the citadel

 

Hard by the temple of Tritonian Pallas,

750

Where the crows never wing their raucous way,

 

Not even when altars smoke with offerings;

 

Such care they take to flee, not from the anger

 

Of Pallas, as the Greek poets have sung,

 

Because of that fateful vigil; but the nature

 

Of the place itself produces this effect.

755

In Syria also there’s another place

 

Like this, they say, where as soon as quadrupeds

 

Have set foot on it, its natural potency

 

Makes them to fall down flat, as if suddenly

 

Slaughtered in sacrifice to the gods below.

 

But all these things have a natural origin

760

And the causes that produce them are quite clear.

 

Do not believe that in these regions lie

 

The gates of Hell, and that the gods below

 

Down to the shores of Acheron draw thence

 

The souls of men, as the light-footed stags

765

By the breath of their nostrils are often thought to draw

 

The tribes of creeping creatures from their holes.

 

How far removed all that is from the truth

 

Learn now; for of the true facts I try to speak.

 

Firstly I say, as I have often said before,

 

That in the earth are atoms of every kind.

770

Many that are in food bring life; and many

 

Can strike us with disease and hasten death.

 

And I have shown before that substances

 

Vary in their power to support life

 

In different animals, because of their different natures

 

And different textures and atomic shapes.

775

For many noxious elements make their way

 

Through the ears, and many through the nostrils

 

Slip in that are injurious and prickly,

 

And not a few touch tells us to avoid

 

And sight to shun, or taste proclaims them bitter.

780

Next it is plain to see how many things

 

Are violently hostile to the senses,

 

Noisome and dangerous. First certain trees

 

Have shade so dangerous that it brings headache

 

If you should lie outstretched on the grass beneath.

785

And on the great high hills of Helicon

 

There grows a tree whose flower can kill a man

 

By the vile nature of its loathsome scent.

 

And all these things, for sure, rise from the soil

 

Since many seeds of many things Earth holds

 

Mixed up in many ways, then separates and delivers them.

790

A lamp at night is extinguished, and its wick

 

Sends out a pungent smell. If this assails

 

The nostrils of some epileptic, prone

 

Other books

Little Black Girl Lost by Keith Lee Johnson
Chosen By The Prince by Calyope Adams
Eclipse of the Heart by Carly Carson
Betrayals of Spring by L.P. Dover
Unpossible by Gregory, Daryl
Hush 2: Slow Burn by Blue Saffire
Reinstated Bond by Holley Trent
Unbeatable Resumes by Tony Beshara
Careful What You Wish For by Maureen McCarthy