On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics)
Page 15
And winding passages and tiny pores
The spirit has seeped out. So you may learn
That in many ways the spirit was dispersed
When from the limbs it made its exit, and
While in the body had been torn apart
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Before it emerged outside, you see, and swam
Into the winds of air and so away.
Let’s take another case. Sometimes the spirit
While moving still within the bounds of life
Gets hurt by something (never mind the cause!)
And wants to leave the body and be free.
The face grows pale, as at the point of death,
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Blood leaves the limbs and all collapse and fall.
This we call fainting. Everyone’s distressed,
Wants to hold fast again the chains of life.
This happens because the mind and spirit are shaken
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And fail, within the fading body. It needs
Only a slightly stronger shock to kill them.
Why then do you doubt that, driven from the body,
Weak, in the open, out of doors, unclothed,
Not only not for ever could the spirit
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Endure, but not for the smallest length of time?
For it is evident that no one, dying,
Feels that the soul intact deserts the body
Nor that it rises first to the throat and then
Through the gullet. Instead he feels it fail
Seated in some fixed place, just as he feels
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His other senses, each in its part, to fail.
But if the mind were immortal, then in dying
It would not complain of being dispersed, but rather
Of going out and shedding its skin, like a snake.
The wisdom and intelligence of mind
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Never in head or feet or hands are born,
But in one fixed and certain region stay.
This is because fixed places are assigned
To everything that is, in which it must
Be born and grow and have its being. A man
Has legs and arms and head and all the rest
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And nothing’s ever upside down. So sure
One thing follows another. You’ll not find
Flames in a river, no, nor frost in fire.
Now, if the mind is immortal and can feel
When parted from the body, we must assume
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It has the five senses. Only in this way
Can we imagine the spirits of the dead
Go wandering in Hades. Painters and poets
Have always shown us spirits endowed with senses.
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But what do you think? Can a spirit without body
Have eyes or nose or hand or tongue, and can
The ears hear by themselves without a body?
And since we feel that vital sense inheres
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In the whole body and that it is the whole
That lives, if suddenly some force
With a swift blow shall cut the body through
So as to sever the two parts asunder,
No doubt the spirit too will be cleft apart,
Divided and cut together with the body.
But what is cut and divided into parts
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Surely can make no claim to be eternal.
They tell how chariots bearing scythes cut off
A man’s limb in the heat of battle. It falls
And quivers on the ground, shorn from the trunk,
But the man feels no pain—the blow’s too sudden.
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A man may lose his left arm and his shield
Torn off amidst the horses by the scythes
Of the chariot wheels and never notice it,
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Drunk with the fight; or losing his right arm
Press on regardless. Another has lost his leg
And the foot lies on the ground twitching its toes.
The head cut off from the hot and living trunk
Stares through its open eyes until what’s left
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Of the spirit is given up and passes away.
Now let’s consider a snake, with flickering tongue,
Long body, and menacing tail. Take your knife
And cut it up. You’ll see the separate parts
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All writhing while the wound is fresh,
Spattering the earth with gore. See how its head
Turns round and back and tries to gnaw its tail,
Wanting to bite away the burning pain.
Shall we then say that in each separate piece
There is a separate spirit? If we do,
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That means that in one single animal
There are many spirits spread throughout the body.
It follows that one single spirit has been
Divided, just as the body has, so each
Must be considered mortal, since they both
Have been alike cut into many parts.
Now also, if the spirit is immortal
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And creeps into the body when we are born,
Why can we not remember time that’s past,
Why do we keep no traces of things done?
For if the mind has been so greatly changed
As to lose all remembrance of past acts,
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That, I think, is not far removed from death.
Wherefore, you must admit, it follows that
The spirit that was before has perished and
The spirit which now is has now been born.
Moreover, if the body is complete
Before the quickened mind can enter it
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When we are born and tread the threshold of life,
It makes no sense that in our body and limbs
And in the blood itself it lives and grows;
Better by far to find a quiet hole
For itself, and let the body do the feeling.
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But all experience shows the contrary,
So interwoven is it with the body
Through veins, flesh, sinews, even bones, that teeth
Also have feeling like the rest. We get toothache,
A twinge from icy water, and grind on grit
That’s found in lumps of bread, all hard and rough.
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Wherefore again and yet again I say
It is unthinkable that spirits have
No beginning or are free from the law of death.
If they come into our bodies from outside
It is unthinkable that they could have
Such close connection with them; and since so close
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Is this connection, safe and unharmed they can’t
Extract themselves from sinews, bones, and joints.
But if by any chance you think that the spirit
Can get into our bodies from outside
And seep through our limbs, then all the more it must,
Fused with the body, perish. What permeates
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Must also dissolve, and therefore perishes.
Consider food: it goes into our bodies,
Into our limbs, dispersed through many channels,
And perishes; and in so doing supports
Another body. So spirit and mind
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May enter the body whole, yet permeating
Dissolve, their elements widely dispersed
Into the limbs through the channels of the body,
Those elements of which the mind consists
Which now, in our body born, is lord of it,
Born of that mind which perished when through our limbs
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It was distributed. Wherefore the spiri
t
Has both a birthday and a funeral.
Now here’s another question. When the body
Is dead do any seeds of spirit remain in it?
If any do, and stay with it, then clearly
The spirit can’t be immortal, since it has gone
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Away and left some parts of itself behind.
And if it has so completely fled away
That not one particle of itself is left,
How do you explain worms? The body rots
And worms appear. Where from? And the other things
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Boneless and bloodless that swarm through the limbs,
Where do they come from? Do you really think
That spirits creep into the worms from outside
One by one into a thousand worms—
A thousand spirits where only one has died?
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Do the spirits go hunting for seeds of the worms
To make a home of them? Or perhaps they creep
Into the bodies of worms already formed?
Why should they do this, why take all this trouble?
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It’s quite a question—worth considering.
For when they are without body they’re not plagued
With illnesses or cold or hunger. No,
The body it is that suffers all these ills
And the mind is often sick through contact with it.
Suppose, however, that they find it useful
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To have a body to enter, there’s no way
That they can do this. Spirits therefore do not
Make bodies for themselves. Nor is it possible
That they creep into bodies already made;
For then they’d never make the subtle links
They have with body, and the touch of common feeling.
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Another point. Why are lions strong and fierce
And foxes cunning, and deer timid and swift,
And every animal has its character
Born in it, when its life begins? It’s breed
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That does this, the fixed power of mind conjoined
Working with body to establish it.
But if it were immortal and could pass
From body to body, then the behaviour
Of animals would be all mixed up. The hound
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Would flee before the charging stag’s attack,
The hawk would tremble, flying through the air
From the dove pursuing it. Reason, in men
No more, to the wild beasts of the field
Would move her seat. So false it is to say
That an immortal spirit can be altered
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By a change of body. For that which changes is
Dissolved and therefore perishes, since its parts
Are transposed, and move from their positions.
Wherefore throughout the limbs these parts must be
Capable of being dissolved and in the end
Die when the body dies, along with it.
But what if human spirits always go
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Into human bodies? Then I still ask why
A foolish spirit can be made of a wise one,
Why children are never wise, and why a foal,
Well trained though it may be, can’t match a horse.
No doubt they’ll tell you that in a tender body
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The mind becomes tender. But even if this is so,
The spirit must still be mortal, since being changed
In the body it loses so much life and feeling.
And how could any mind in any body
Grow strong and reach the longed-for flower of life
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Unless from the beginning it were its consort?
Why does it want to flee from limbs grown old?
Does it fear that a rotting corpse will be its prison
Or that its house worn by the years will fall
And crush it? But the immortal has no dangers.
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And really it is ridiculous to imagine
That spirits at the coupling and birth of animals
Stand waiting to get in, immortal spirits
Awaiting mortal bodies, numberless,
Jostling and fighting to get in. Unless, that is,
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They’ve made some sort of contract among themselves,
First come first served, that puts an end to squabbling.
To continue. A tree can’t grow in the sky, nor clouds
Float in the sea, nor fish live on dry land,
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Nor blood exist in logs nor sap in stones.
Everything has its place, certain and fixed,
Where it must live and grow and have its being.
So mind cannot arise without the body
Alone, nor exist apart from blood and sinews.
But if the mind (and this would be much easier)
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Could be by itself in head or shoulders or heels
And be born in any part, still it would stay
In the same man, the same vessel, enclosed.
And since, within the body, mind and spirit
By a fixed rule and ordinance are given
The place where they may live and grow apart,
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It is clearly all the more impossible
For them to live and last outside the body.
Wherefore when body has died you must confess
That spirit through body torn has also died.
It really is quite stupid to suppose
That mortal with immortal can be joined
And feel as one and act upon each other.
What could be more absurd and inconsistent
And contradictory than this: that mortal
Linked with immortal could weather furious storms?
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Few things there are that last eternally.
First, solid bodies that repel assaults,
And allow nothing to penetrate them
And break apart the close-knit parts within,
Such as the atomic particles of matter
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The nature of which we have described before;
Next, things which last through all the length of time
Because no blow can hit them; such is the void,
Which stays untouched and nothing can ever strike it;
Next, things which have no space around them
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Into which they can dissolve and be dispersed;
Such is the eternal sum of the sum of things.
Outside it nowhere any place exists
Into which its elements can spring away,
And nothing exists to impact it or destroy it.
But if you think the spirit is immortal
Because it’s fortified against all forms of death,
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Or nothing ever comes to do it harm
Or, if it does, for some reason turns back
Repulsed before we can see what harm it does,
Yet many ills and dangers harass it.
It sickens when the body itself is sick;
But that’s not all; for often something comes,
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Some doubt about the future that tortures it,
Racks it with fear and wears it out with worry.
Remorse about the past for evil done
Bites it, with madness and forgetfulness,
And lethargy’s black waters cover it.
Therefore death nothing is to us, nothing
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That matters at all, since mind we know is mortal.
Long years ago, when the Phoenicians
Were coming in upon us from all sides,
When the world shook with the tumult of war
And quaked, and shivered to the heights of heaven,
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When all men doubted where by land and sea
The victory would lie, we were untroubled.
So, when the end shall come, when the close bonds
Of body and spirit that hold us here shall part
And we shall be no more, nothing can harm us
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Or make us feel, since nothing of us remains,
Though earth be joined with sea and sea with sky.
And if it were true that mind and spirit can still
Have feeling torn from the body, that means to us
Nothing, since the marriage bonds of body and spirit
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Weld us together in one single whole.
No more, again, if time should after death
Collect our matter and bring it back, and if
The lights of life were given back to us,
Would that concern us, not one whit, when once
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Our memory of ourselves has passed away.
And nothing now comes back to us from that self
That was before, nor from it now can fear
Or anguish ever touch us.
When you review the whole past length of time
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Existing measureless, and think how mixed
And various the motions of matter are,
You will easily believe that the same seeds
Of which we now are made, have often before
Been placed in the positions they are now in.
But memory cannot recall it, since in between
A great gulf is fixed, a halt of life, and all
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The wandering motions have been scattered far
From things we know. If in a future time
A man is to suffer pain and misery,
He must exist, or else he could not feel it.
But death makes this impossible and forbids
The man to exist to whom these ills could come.
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Therefore we may be certain that in death
There is nothing to fear, that he who does not exist
Cannot feel pain, that it makes no difference
Whether or not a man has been born before,
When death the immortal has taken his mortal life.
So when you see a man resent his fate
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That after death his body in the tomb
Must rot, or perish in flames or by wild beasts,
You will know that he rings false, that in his heart
Lies deep some hidden sting, though he denies
That he believes there’s feeling after death.
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He does not really accept what he professes,
He does not wholly remove himself from life,
But all unknown to himself he makes something
Of himself to survive and go on living.
For when in life he tells himself his future
That after death his body by wild beasts
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And birds will be devoured, torn to pieces,