On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) (35 page)

These things which men found out from life and need

 

Were doubtless fashioned for the sake of use.

 

Quite different are those things which came into being

 

Before any conception of their usefulness;

 

And first in this class are the senses and the limbs.

855

Wherefore again and yet again I say

 

Banish from your mind the possibility

 

That they could have been made for the sake of usefulness.

 

Nor is there any reason to be surprised

 

That by the very nature of its body

 

Every animal seeks food. I have shown you that

 

Many atoms in many ways are thrown off from things,

860

But most must come from animals. Always these are

 

In motion, and many atoms are pressed out

 

From deep down in sweat and many through the mouth

 

As they pant in exhaustion, so the body is rarefied

865

And its nature undermined; and pain results.

 

So food is taken, to prop up the body,

 

And working inside renews the strength and stops

 

Through veins and limbs the gaping desire to eat.

 

And fluid also goes into all those parts

870

That need it, and the massed particles of heat

 

That set our stomach in a blaze are scattered

 

By the fluid entering, and quenched like fire,

 

So the parching heat no longer burns our frame.

 

Thus then your panting thirst is swilled away

 

Out of the body, thus your famished craving

875

Is satisfied, the body’s needs fulfilled.

 

Now I will tell you how it is that we walk

 

And can stride forward when we wish, and how

 

We are able to move our limbs in various ways,

 

And what it is that is wont to push along

 

Our body’s heavy weight. Please mark my words.

880

I say that in the first place images

 

Of walking come in contact with the mind

 

And strike the mind, as I have said before.

 

Hence follows will: for no one ever begins

 

Anything unless the mind has first foreseen

 

What it wills to do (and what the mind foresees

 

Is the image of the thing). Therefore the mind

885

When it conceives the wish of walking forward

 

Immediately strikes the mass of spirit

 

Dispersed through all the body and the limbs

 

(And this is easy for it, since it lives

 

In such close combination with the spirit).

 

The spirit then strikes the body, and so the whole mass

890

Is gradually pushed forward into movement.

 

The body then also expands its pores, and air,

 

As is natural with something always mobile,

 

Pours into the opened passages and penetrates them,

 

Thus reaching the very smallest parts of the body.

895

So thus by two things acting in two ways

 

The body is moved, like a ship by sails and wind.

 

Nor is there anything surprising here

 

That elements so small can turn so large

 

A body and twist our whole weight around.

900

The wind, that is so subtle and so fine,

 

Drives on a mighty ship with mighty power,

 

And one hand rules it whatever its speed may be,

 

One rudder steers it whither you may will;

 

And many a heavy weight by blocks and pulleys

905

A derrick can move and lift with little effort.

 

Next, in what way sleep floods the limbs with peace

 

And from the heart lets free the mind’s disquiet

 

I shall declare in verses sweet though few.

 

Better the swan’s brief song than that cry of cranes

910

Spread by the south wind through the clouds on high.

 

Give me keen ears and understanding mind

 

Lest you deny that what I say can be,

 

And shrink back, your heart repelling words of truth

 

Though you are in fault yourself and cannot see it.

915

In the first place, sleep comes when the power of the spirit

 

Is drawn apart through the body, and part of it

 

Cast forth has gone away, and part retreats

 

Into the depths compacted and compressed.

 

For only then the limbs relax and lie.

 

For there is no doubt that by the work of the spirit

920

Sensation comes, and when sleep deadens it

 

We must suppose that the spirit has been disordered

 

And quite cast out; not all of it; for then the body

 

Would lie steeped in the eternal chill of death.

 

Since if no part of the spirit remained hidden

925

In our body, as fire lies covered deep in ashes,

 

Whence could our feeling suddenly through the limbs

 

Rekindle, as flame leaps from hidden fire?

 

But by what cause this new state comes to pass

 

And whence the spirit can be disordered, and how

 

The body made to languish, I will explain.

930

Please see that my words are not wasted on the winds.

 

First it must be that since the body is touched

 

By the motions of the air surrounding it

 

Its outer part by frequent blows of air

 

Is thumped and buffeted; and that is why

 

Nearly all things that live and grow are covered

935

By skin or even shells or rind or bark.

 

The body’s inside also when we breathe

 

This same air strikes, drawn in and out. And so

 

Since the body is beaten outside and in, and since

 

The blows through tiny channels penetrate

940

The primary parts and primal elements,

 

Slowly, collapse (as it were) occurs in the limbs.

 

The atoms of mind and body are dislodged

 

From their positions. Next part of the spirit

 

Is ejected out, and part withdraws within,

945

And part also is scattered through the body

 

And so cannot unite and combine in motion.

 

For nature blocks the paths and meeting places,

 

So feeling sinks down deep when the motions are changed.

 

And since there is nothing to prop up the limbs,

950

The body becomes weak, the limbs grow faint,

 

Arms and eyelids fall, and as we lie down

 

The knees give way and all their strength is gone.

 

Again sleep follows food, since it acts like air

 

When it has dissolved through all the veins.

955

And much the deepest sleep is that which comes

 

From satiety or weariness, for then

 

The greatest number of atoms is disordered,

 

Bruised by much labour. Of the spirit too

 

In the same way a part is thrown together

 

At a greater depth, and the part ejected is greater,

960

And the separations and divisions magnified.

 

And those pursuits which most we love to follow,

 

The things in which just now we have been engaged,

 

The mind being thus the more intent upon them,

 

These are most oft the substance of our dreams.

965

Lawyers argue their cases and make laws,

 

Generals fight battles, leading troops to war,

 

Sailors pursue their struggles with the wind,

 

And I ply my own task and seek the nature of things

 

Always, and tell them in our native tongue.

970

All other pursuits and arts seem thus in dreams

 

To hold the minds of men with their illusions.

 

When men have been to games and theatres

 

For many days, we usually see,

 

When they have ceased to observe these with their senses,

975

That paths are left still open in the mind

 

By which the images of these things can enter.

 

For many days then these same things are moving

 

Before their eyes, so that even while awake

 

They seem to see dancers swaying supple limbs,

980

And the lyre’s liquid notes and speaking strings

 

Enter their ears, and the same audience

 

They see and the varied glories of the stage.

 

So great is the effect of interest and pleasure

 

And of things which form the habits of men’s lives,

985

Not only of men, but of all animals.

 

You will see horses, when they lie in sleep,

 

Break out in sweat and panting hard and fast

 

As if straining every nerve to win a race,

 

Or plunging from the opened starting gates.

990

And often hounds lying in gentle sleep

 

Suddenly throw up their legs and all at once

 

Give tongue and keenly sniff the air, as if

 

They have found and held the scent of some wild beast.

 

And even when awake they often chase

995

Other books

Marrying the Enemy by Nicola Marsh
The Good People by Hannah Kent
Ransom River by Meg Gardiner
Moon in a Dead Eye by Pascal Garnier
Silver Kiss by Naomi Clark
Typhoid Mary by Anthony Bourdain
If I Should Die by Grace F. Edwards
The Bridal Hunt by Lynn, Jeanette