On the Nature of Things (De Rerum Natura) by Titus Lucretius Carus (c. 99 - c. 55 BCE) This abridged presentation of Lucretius' famous six-book poem on nature focuses mostly on those passages essential to Epicureanism based on translations by Sisson and Rouse. The contents of these files are not public domain, but appear by permission of the copyright holders mentioned in the notices at the bottom of each page -- all rights reserved. About 50% to 60% of the text from each book is represented here; breaks in the text are demarcated by a numeric heading which corresponds to the line number of the Latin manuscript. An unabridged public-domain translation is also available at MIT. |
Book II
Pleasant it is, when on the great sea, the winds trouble the waters, to gaze from shore upon another’s great tribulation: Not because any man’s troubles are a delectable joy, but because to perceive what ills you are free from yourself is pleasant. Pleasant is it also to behold great encounters of warfare arrayed over the plains, with no part of yours in the peril. But nothing is more delightful than to possess lofty sanctuaries serene, well fortified by the teachings of the wise, whence you may look down upon others and behold them all astray wandering abroad and seeking the path of life: —the strife of wits, the fight for precedence, all laboring night and day with surpassing toil to mount upon the pinnacle of riches. Oh pitiable minds of men, Oh blind intelligences! In what gloom of life, in how great perils is passed all your poor span of time not to see that all nature barks for is this: That pain be removed away out of the body, and that the mind, kept away from care and fear, enjoy a feeling of delight! . Thus we see that few things altogether are necessary for the bodily nature, only such in each case as take pain away, and can also spread for our use many delights; Nor does nature herself ever crave anything more pleasurable, if there be no golden images of youths about the house, upholding fiery torches in their right hands that light may be provided for nightly revelings, if the hall does not shine with silver and glitter with gold, if no crossbeams paneled and gilded echo the lyre, when all the same, men can stretch forth in groups upon the soft grass beside a rill of water under branches of a tall tree merrily refreshing themselves at no great cost, especially when the weather smiles, and the season of the year besprinkles the green herbage with flowers. . And no quicker do hot fevers fly away from your body, if you have pictured tapestry and blushing purple to toss upon, than if you must lie sick under the poor man’s blanket. Therefore, since treasures profit nothing for our body, nor noble birth nor the glory of royalty, we must further think that for the mind also they are unprofitable; Except perhaps in so far as the sight of your army performing maneuvers especially for your review, or the spectacle of your fleet putting out in the channel gives you a moment’s distraction from you religion and your anxieties at the approach of death leaving your mind to benefit by its emptiness. . But if you see that such a hope is ridiculous and that in fact men’s fears and anxieties are not erased by expensive martial noises, so that even outrageously powerful political figures feel them in spite of all the flashing equipment and even the best padded uniforms cannot deaden them, how can we doubt that only reason can soothe us in a life which, after all, is passed in darkness? . For just as children are afraid of the dark, their elders, as often as not, are afraid in the light of things which really there is just as little cause to fear as those with which children contrive to frighten themselves. These grown-up terrors are also no more than shadows and yet they are nothing that sunlight can dissipate: What is needed is the rational study of nature. . So now I will tell you how the generative particles bring different things into being and then dissolve them, how they move, what the forces are which control them, and with what velocity they are propelled through the emptiness: These are the issues for which I require your attention. . Matter is certainly not glued firmly together, since everything we see wears out and grows less so that everything seems to flow away in the end, concealing its final decrepitude from our eyes while the universe as a whole somehow goes on. This is because the particles which escape from one object attach themselves to another and so one thing will grow old and another flower. That is not all: for everything is renewed and mortals live by preying on one another. Some kinds of creatures increase, while others diminish; In a little time there is a new generation, as the torch is handed on by Olympic runners. . There are those who think that particles can stop moving and then start again after reaching a point of rest, but that is an intellectual deviation. For, since they move through emptiness, each must be carried along by its own weight or else by impact from another particle; For if they hit one another they jump away— hardly surprising, since they are very hard bodies, heavy and solid, with no obstructions behind them. . To understand how matter is agitated, you have to remember the universe has no bottom nor any other point at which things can stop, being that space is without limit —spreading out on every side immeasurably— a point which has already been fully demonstrated. . With this arrangement, there is no question of any particle being anywhere at rest in the void, but all are moved for ever in varying directions. Some hit and rebound to a considerable distance, while others recoil but a little way from the shock; And the ones which are separated by smaller intervals are those whose shapes are such that they get entangled: These form the substance of the hardest rocks and of iron and other things of similar weight and density. Those particles which jump a long way apart —and these are, relatively, a small number only— leaving wide spaces between, make up such substances as the thin air and the bright rays of the sun. . Many particles wander in the great void, some of them reject and stray from substances, having found no group that they could belong to. A model and image of such wandering particles is something we have daily before our eyes: Just look when sunbeams shine in a darkened room; you will see many tiny objects twisting and turning and moving here and there where the sunlight shows. It’s as if they were in an unending conflict with squadrons coming and going in ceaseless battle, now forming groups, now scattering, and nothing lasting. From this you can imagine the agitation of the genetic particles in the great emptiness, so far at any rate as so small an example can give any hint of infinite events. . Or you might say that it is worthwhile to study the way in which the motes of dust dance in a sunbeam because the behavior of these tiny objects gives us a notion of that of invisible particles. You will see many of these sailing dust-motes impelled no doubt by collisions one cannot detect, change direction, and turn off this way or that. Surely their movement depends on that of the particles. . The particles are of course the first things to move; Then it is the turn of the smallest groups which are, so to say, the next in the order of forces that are shaken by an impulse from the particles till they in turn hit something a little bigger. So movement arises from the original particles and continues in series until it reaches our senses and we see at last the motes which dance in the sunbeams, even though at this stage collisions are not perceptible. . Memmius, my next subject is the velocity of particles and it can be disposed of in very few words. When first the dawn comes scattering its new light and the miscellaneous birds, here and there in the woods, begin to fill the air with their fluid song, how suddenly does the sun as it rises up pour its light over everything! This is a spectacle which we have witnessed over and over again. And yet the warmth that the sun puts out, and the light, do not travel in absolute emptiness, there is something to hinder them; . They have to swim, so to speak, through waves of air. Moreover, the particles of heat do not come singly but tangled up or joined together in masses; So they impede one another, and find themselves bumping against other particles; their travel is relatively slow. But the original particles, heavy and dense, traveling through the great emptiness—nothing impedes them no doubt because they are so much of a unity— are carried forward without any change of direction. They must certainly be distinguished for speed and move much faster than the rays of the sun, passing over the same distance in much less time than it takes sunbeams as they move through the sky. . 216 There is something more to be learned about this matter: As bodies are borne on down through the void by their own weight, at uncertain times and places, they give way a little to one side or another in a slight deflection. . If they did not, then everything would fall down, like drops of rain falling forever through emptiness, there would be no occasion for encounters of elements and if one did not strike another there would be no creation. . For if anyone thinks that the heavier bodies could fall on the lighter, because they fall down more swiftly, and that this could be the origin of the encounters which bring about the movements of generations, they are certainly wandering a long way from the truth. Anything falling through water or through the air no doubt must gain in speed as it has more weight because the body of water and the nature of air are such that they cannot offer equal resistance to everything, but give way fast to the heaviest: But the void has no power of resisting anything at any time whatsoever or at any place; Its nature is to give way, and so it does. It follows that the void is passive and everything falls through it at equal speed whatever its weight and therefore there is no question of lighter elements being fallen upon from above, so having encounters which might produce the movements required by nature. . It is clear as day that there must be some slight deflection in elements as they fall, but only the slightest; We must avoid the suggestion of slantwise motion for it is a matter of common observation that heavy bodies do not fall out of the vertical. If they fall they fall, you have only to look to see this. Yet to say that nothing suffers the slightest deflection is to go beyond what observation shows. . Again, if all motion is always one long chain, and if everything is so determined, and if the elements could never swerve so that they break the order of fate so that cause does not follow cause infinitely, How would living creatures everywhere come by that freedom which enables the will to wrench itself loose from fate and us to go up and down the world as we like? We change direction not because it is time to do so or because we are where we must, but because we want to. Without a doubt, it is our wills that begin these movements which are carried out through our limbs. Haven’t you seen, at the moment the barriers open at the start of a race, the horses, as if hesitating, unable to throw themselves forward as fast as they want to? The whole of their matter has to be brought into motion, which means that the messages have to run through their bodies till every bit is altered and moves with the mind. As you see, the impetus comes from within; The movement starts in the mind and in the will; From there it spreads through the limbs and through the whole body. . It is not at all the same thing when we move at the instance of an overpowering force, or simply because someone pushes us. In that case the material of the whole body obviously moves in spite of us, hurried onwards until the will succeeds in curbing it. The fact is that external forces may move us and hurry us onwards by the scruff of our necks; Yet in spite of this, there still is something inside us which can put up a struggle and get in the way of them. It is this which controls the material of our bodies and by a certain adjustment of our limbs brings them up in their flight and returns them to rest. . There must for this reason be in the elements some cause of movement other than weights and collisions from which we could derive our innate free will: for we know nothing is ever produced from nothing. The existence of weight means that all is not done by collision, as it were by external force; but the mind would be reduced to inner necessities for our very least action and so defeated as to suffer and bear without choice if it were not for the tiny swerves which happen to elements in times and places which are in no way determined. . The total supply of matter was never more close-packed than it is now, nor was it ever more scattered: For nothing is added to it or taken away. And so the movement of elements at the present is exactly as it has been in times gone by, which is just the same as it will be in the future: The way that things have been produced is the way the they will be, The same conditions of being and growth and strength as each thing has been given by the law of nature will continue, and nothing will change the whole of nature. For there is nothing outside it to which any matter could make an escape; nor again is there anything anywhere from which a new force could break in and so change the course of nature, or disrupt the pattern of movement. . It is nothing to wonder at, when you think about it, that although the elements are in ceaseless motion the universe as a whole appears to be stationary except so afar as particular bodies are moving. We are dealing with things which are too small for perception when we speak of elements: and since the bodies themselves are too small to be seen, so naturally are their movements. Indeed, with things which are visible, there is concealment, often of movements, which distance can often erase. For example, when flocks of sheep are devouring a hillside, drifting about as the sparkling dew on the pasture tempts them to this bit or that, while the lambs full of milk play around the ewes, or amiably butt one another: All this is completely confused from a distance and looks like a patch of white on the green of the hill. In the same way it happens that legions may be on exercise, filling the plain with an imitation battle, with cavalry dashing about and making the ground shake; The flashes of their arms and their armor reaching the sky and making the earth seem brilliant as well as noisy; The whole accompanied by vociferous shouting which echoes from mountains and seems to go up to the starts yet there will be a place high up in the mountains from which all this looks like a bring spot on the plain. . Now let us look at the nature of the elements And how they differ from one another in shape; You will see that there is extraordinary variety: Not that the number in any one group is small But that in general they are not completely alike. No wonder: since the stock of them is so great, unlimited, as I have taught—one might say, infinite— there is plenty of room for variety and it would be odd if all of them were of identical size and shape. . 381 It is easy enough to explain why a streak of lightning has so much more penetration than a flame of the sort which flickers off the top of our torches. You may say that the fire from the sky is much more subtle and that the elements it consists of are smaller so that it easily finds its way through interstices impermeable by the flame of a torch made of pine. . In the same way light can travel through sheets of horn but rain cannot: why, if it were not that the elements which make up light are smaller than those of water? . And wine will run through a strainer as fast as you like while oil will dawdle and go through drop by drop; Either the elements making up oil are bigger or else they are hooked and catch on one another, which means that they cannot very easily separate as they have to do in order to go through the mesh because they must go through the openings one by one. . Or take the case of liquids like honey and milk which leave a pleasant sensation upon the tongue in contrast with the bitter flavor of wormwood or centaury, whose flavor puckers the mouth: You can easily see that smooth and rounded elements must form the things agreeable to the taste, while things which are bitter and rough upon the palate are composed of hooked and implicated elements and therefore have to cut their way through our senses breaking open the organs to find a way in. . 478 Here I would add a refinement to my theory which follows from what I have said: that the elements have only a finite variety of shapes. If it were otherwise, some elements necessarily would have themselves to be of infinite size. As long as they are small there is no possibility of more than a limited variation in shape. Imagine an element divided in three small parts, or not much more; then try to arrange those parts in any manner you will, in a single body. You can put the top to the bottom or the left or the right and try any other combination of changes to produce a modification of the whole shape: You will soon arrive at the point where, to effect any change, you will have to add new parts; and if you continue with new arrangements, you will find for similar reasons that you will need to add new parts. . You will see that increase of size will follow inevitably from multiplication of shapes: and you cannot believe in an infinite variety in the shapes of elements without admitting that some are of monstrous proportion; I have shown that this is something you cannot prove. . Why, the brilliant cloths we get from the barbarians, Meliboean purple, dye from the shells of Thessaly, the very peacocks with their astonishing beauty would soon be superseded by other colors; No one would think anything more of myrrh or honey; The song of the swans and the sweet sound of stringed instruments would be surpassed and so reduced to silence for there would always be something better than they. Or everything could just as well deteriorate and you would get the same process in reverse: Things would become increasingly offensive to our noses and ears and eyes and to our taste. But since none of these things happens and there are limits to what you may experience in either direction it follows that matter has a fixed number of shapes. . Likewise, from fire to the freezing frosts of winter is a finite distance, whichever way you look at it; Between them is every degree of heat and cold and altogether these make up a perfect series. So created objects differ in finite ways since the bounds of their sensible qualities are so marked at one end by flames, at the other end by hard frost. . To this I would add another not unconnected point; It is that the number of elemental bodies which are of similar shape, is bound to be infinite; For since the number of shapes has been shown to be finite, it must be, for otherwise you would be asserting that the supply of matter is limited; which it is not, as indeed I showed, in a few not ill-sounding verses, when I was explaining how material elements out of the infinite hold up the ordered universe by raining upon it a continuous series of blows. . 730 Another point now from my delightful studies. You should not suppose the whiteness you see in an object means whiteness in its elements, or that black objects come from elements which themselves are black; Nor indeed, whatever color an object has, that it is made of elements of that color. The elements of matter have no color at all, neither like the objects they form nor yet unlike them. . If you think that colorless bodies are inconceivable, I can only tell you that you are a long way astray. For those who are born blind and have never seen the light of the sun, still know bodies by touch from the earliest age, with no conjunction of color. So it is evident that the mind can form an idea of objects without the assistance of color; And we ourselves find, touching things in the dark, that we feel them, though we have no sensation of color. . May I now reinforce the point by a little theory? Any color can change into any other —which is not consistent with nature of elements. There must be something unchangeable in the elements if everything is not to turn into nothing, for nothing can change so as to change its nature without the extinction of what it was before. Do not therefore attribute color to elements; You would be on the way to destroying the whole creation. . On the other hand, if you take it there is no color in elements, but that they are of various shapes which can produce and change the whole range of colors and if you go on to attribute a proper importance to their position and movements and interrelations; You will find no difficulty in explaining how something which a moment before was black as coal should suddenly change and look as white as marble: As the sea, when tremendous winds have stirred up its waters, is turned into waves with a white sheen. You would say that something we often see as black will, when there is some disorder in its elements and some are added and some taken away, appear immediately as shining white. If the elements of the sea were in fact sea-blue they could not be white, it is as simple as that: But however you jumbled them up they would still be blue and nothing could ever turn them into white. . If it were from elements of various colors that the pure and uniform skin of the sea was made in the way that you might construct, for example, a perfect square out of miscellaneous shapes, then you would expect, as in the square you could see, the dissimilar shapes that made it; So it is in the sea or in any other thing with a uniform surface that the various contrasting colors make it up. . Besides, with the various shapes which might make a square, There is no conflict between the part and the whole: But variety in the colors which make up a surface are a real impediment to its uniformity. . And anyhow, it does not help the theory which attributes various colors to elements if the argument is, not that white things are made of white elements and black of black, but that both are made from a mixture because whiteness would certainly be produced more easily from colorless elements than, let us say, from black or indeed from any color which is contrary to it. . And since without light there cannot be any colors and elements do not emerge in the light at all it must be that they are in fact without color. What sort of color can there be in pitch darkness? Doesn’t color change with the light and in fact depend on whether the light falls directly or indirectly? Take a look at a pigeon in the sunlight and the little feathers about its neck and head; Sometimes they flash and you might be looking at rubies; Another time, it may be, the impression you get is of something between sky-blue and emerald. A peacock’s tail spread out in a brilliant light gives off all colors as it turns in the sun. It is by the fall of light that colors are made and one cannot conceive that they could exist without it. . And since what affects the eye is a sort of blow on the pupil, when it is said to be seeing white, and so with black and all the other colors; When you touch something, colors are irrelevant, the thing that matters about it is the shape: So one may say that elements don’t need colors; Their shapes alone give different tactile impressions. . If the colors of elements don’t depend on their shapes in any rigorous way, but are simply whatever they turn out to be, without any rhyme or reason, why then are the things composed of them not equally apt to take on any color by chance? You would think you would often see a crow fly by flapping great wings of the most striking white and the swans would be black if that’s what their elements were or take any other color in the same way. . The more a body is divided into small parts —the more it loses its color, and in the end you can see the color is put out like a light; This happens when anyone makes a fine division of purple, or scarlet, the most brilliant color of all; Take it thread by thread, the color disappears; This shows that bits of matter will lose their color even before you take the division as far as the elements. . 1023 Now turn your mind towards the truth of reason. It is a new matter now that will reach your ears, something to make the sum of things seem different. Nothing is ever so easy that it does not seem difficult the first time you try to take it in, nor anything so great a wonder that in time it ceases to cause even the least surprise. Consider the clear blue color of the sky and all that it contains, the stars that wander in it, the moon, the incomparable brightness of the sun: If all these were presented now to mortals for the first time and suddenly met their eyes, could anyone say there was anything more magnificent or could any nation have dared to imagine such things? I think not, for it would be such a wonder. Yet, as it is, people are thoroughly weary of looking at them; They hardly deign to raise their eyes for the purpose. Do not, I beg you, be so frightened of novelty as to reject what is reasonable: sharpen your judgment; weigh what I say and, and if it strikes you as true, give in; if false, prepare to come to grips with it. The mind seeks to understand, in the limitless spaces extending out beyond the walls of the world, what may be there for the intelligence to grasp and so to speak flies through space to see what it is. . First then, in whatever direction you travel from here, to left or right, upwards or downwards, or any way, there is no end to the universe. I have said it; The thing itself shouts it; the nature of space will have it so. Since that is so, the void spreads out infinitely and elements in unlimited numbers float in many ways, driven in endless movement, can there then be the slightest possibility that this one globe of earth and this one sky should be all there is, and the rest of matter do nothing? Especially as the world is made by nature and all the elements crashed into one another in innumerable ways without result or purpose until at last they were thrown into such conjunctions as suddenly produced the wonderful world, the earth, the sea, the sky and all living creatures. Again and again you are driven to this conclusion: That there must somewhere else have been other conjunctions like those which are held here in the jealous grasp of ether. . Besides, wherever there is matter to hand and place for it, and no cause to prevent it, the matter must indeed turn into things. For if the number of elemental bodies is such that a whole age could not reckon it up and if the force of nature remains the same to throw the wandering elements to and fro in the same way as here, it must be admitted there are other worlds in other parts of the universe and other races of men and of wild beasts. . Consider moreover that in the whole of nature there is not a thing unique and without antecedents and most must be classified as one of a kind. Take first of all the animals, you will see it is so. It is so with the wild beasts roaming in the mountains, the human race itself, as well as the silent shoals of fish and the flying creatures. On the same principle you must admit that the sky, the earth, the sun, moon, sea and all the rest of it are not unique, but there are countless numbers of them; for these are things which have a term to their lives and which are as dependent on the body as any creature of an abundant species. . If you keep these things in mind, nature will seem to be on her own, free of presumptuous masters, doing everything herself with no help from the gods. For I appeal to the holy hearts of the gods, which in tranquil peace pass untroubled days and a life serene: Who can rule everything? Who can have all space safe in his hand as if he held a rein? Who can turn all the skies, or bring enough ethereal fire to warm up all the fruitful worlds? Ready in every time and in every place to make shadows with clouds and shake the skies with thunder? And then send lightning, which often strikes on the gods’ own temples, and in desert places falls pointlessly, and often misses the guilty to take instead the life of innocent people? . When the world was born, and after the sea’s first day, after the earth and sun had been formed together, new matter came to join them from outside; New elements were thrown in from the great universe: So sea and earth could grow, and so appeared the palace of the sky and the high roofs were built far from the earth and then air came. For wherever it came from, the great rain of blows sent every element to the appropriate object; moisture to moisture and earth added to the earth; The fire joined up with fire, and ether with ether; until creative nature finished the job and bought each substance to its fullest growth as happens when what passes into the veins of life is no more than flows out and passes away. Then is the time when everything comes to a stop and nature reins back any further increase. For when anything that you see is growing happily and gradually, step by step, approaches maturity, it is taking in more elements than it gives out, for food is readily taken into its veins and it is not so laxly made that it loses particles faster than the ages can replace them. Of course, our bodies ordinarily lose quite a lot, that is evident enough: but they take in more until the day when they reach the summit of growth. From then on, little by little, age breaks us up and we flow away to the worse side of things. The larger anything is—the bigger the surface once growth has stopped—then the more it scatters around and elements leave it then in all directions. Food is no longer easily absorbed in the veins; Not enough is kept to replace the outflowing tide, so what is needed to make up the loss as must be done if there is to be renewal. All bodies perish when the outflow leaves them rarefied; They succumb at last to the elements from outside. Food, sooner or later, is not enough for old age, the body cannot withstand all the shocks from without which beat upon in and finally get the better of it. . And so it will be at last with the walls of the world which are falling into decay in a crumbling ruin. For it is food which is necessary for renovation to keep them upright or merely to sustain them; But the time comes when the veins cannot take in enough or it may be that nature does not provide enough food. . Coda Already the old plowman shakes his head to see that all his work has come to nothing: When he compares the present with the past he may well praise the fortunes of his father. He will go on about old times, recalling how men lived easily on far less land and plots of ground were smaller; He does not understand that things grow worse, that all things move to death, worn out by age.
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