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Though ch with men and fruit, has rarely shown
A thing more glorious than this fingle one :
His verfe, compos'd of nature's works, declare
His wit was ftrong, and his invention rare; 751
His judgment deep and found, whence fome be-
gan,

And juftly too, to think him more than man.
Yet he, with all the meaner others nam'd,
Though for fome rare inventions justly fam'd,
Which they have left as oracles, more fure
Than from the tripod spoke, and lefs obfcure
Than thole, th' ancients from the Pythia heard
In the first feeds of things has greatly err'd.
That things may move, or may be soft, or rare,
Without a void, as water, flanie, or air,
They all affirm;

That nature never refts

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If all things from four elements arose, And are again by death diffolv'd to those; What reafon we fhould rather fondly deem Them principles of things, than things of them? For they alternately are chang'd, and show Each others figure, and their nature too : And if you think that earth is join'd with fire, With water, air, their nature still entire, Nothing could first be made; or, made, increas'd; Nor tree, nor man, nor tender fruit, nor beaft: For each component in the various mass Would keep its nature, and be what it was; And we should view, confus'dly join'd and fix'd, Thin air with earth, and fire with water mix'd. Bat principles of things must be unknown, Of nature undifcern'd, left any one Rifing above the other should appear. And how that things not truly compounds are. Befides, they all these four from heav'n derive; And firft, that flame is turn'd to air, believe; Thence water, and thence earth; and fo retire From earth to water, thence to air and fire: Their change ne'er ceases, but about they're driv'n From heav'n to earth, from earth again to heav'n. But feeds can never change their nat'ral state; They muft endure, free from the pow'r of fate, 800 Left all fhould fink to nought, and thence arife; For what is chang'd from what it was, that dies. Now, fince these four can die, fince thofe can fail, Of other feeds, o'er,which no ftrokes prevail, They must be fram'd; left all fhould rife, and all

return

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To nought; and nothing be both womb and urn: Then rather grant feeds fuch, that they did frame A fingle body; as, for instance, flame;

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Yet take away, or add fome new to thofe ; . Their fite and motion chang'd, would air compofe;

And fo of other things.

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But you'll object, and fay, 'tis manifeft From earth rife trees, are nourish'd and increas'd; And if the feafons prove not kind and good, Moisture and foaking fhow'rs corrupt the wood; And did not Phœbus fhed enlivening heat, No fruit or beafts could grow, lock fair and great; And we, unless upheld by means, should die, Swallow'd by treacherous mortality;

Life loos'd from nerves and bones, long fince had fled, 820

And left the wafted carcafe pale and dead.
For we from certain things our strength receive;
And other things from certain others live;
For various common principles are fix'd
In every thing, and all confus'd and mix'd.
And therefore nature knows no gen'ral good;
But diff'rent things must have their diff'rent
food:

And thus it matters to the grand defign,
How, or with what, the various feeds combine;
What fite, and what pofition they maintain; 830
What motion give, and what receive again.
For the fame feeds compofe both earth and feas,
The fun, the moon, all th' animals and trees;
But their contexture, or their motion, disagrees.,
So in my verse are letters common found
To many words, unlike in fenfe and found:
Such great variety bare change affords
Of order, in few elements of words.
[may rife
Now, fince the feeds of things are more, from them
More diff'rent shapes, and more varieties.
Next let's examine, with a curious eye,
Anaxagoras' philofophy;

By copious Greece term'd homœomery.
For which our Latin language, poor in words,
Not one expreffive fingle voice affords :
Yet by an eafy short periphrafis,
We plainly can discover what it is;

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Besides, too weak, too feeble seeds he chofe,
If they are like the bodies they compofe,
And liable to death as well as those;
For which of all these beings could endure
The vi'lent jaws of death, from death secure?
Could fire, could air, could water, blood, or bone?
Which of all these? In my opinion, none.
Since all would be as liable to die,
Subject to powerful mortality,

As thofe, which force deftroys before our eye;.
But I by former arguments have taught,
That things nor perifh to, nor rife from nought.

Befides, fince by our meat our bodies grow, Are nourish'd and increas'd, we plainly know 870

That bones, and blood, and veins, and nerves are

made

Of parts diffimilar, in order laid.

But if the meat in perfect form contains Small parts of nerves, of blood, of bones, and veins;

Then meat and drink would in themselves preferve Diffimilar parts, as blood, bone, vein, and nerve. Yet more if all those things, that spring from earth,

Before they rofe, before they show'd their birth, Lay hid within; the clods mug needs comprife, As proper parts, thofe various things that rife: 880 Now change the fubject, keep the terms the fame;

In wood, if smoke lies hid, and sparks and flame, It must confift of parts of diff'rent frame.

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But there's a little fhift, a flight excufe, Which Anaxagoras' fcholars ufe. Though fuch lie mix'd in all, that part alone Appears, which only to the fenfe is shown; Which in the compofition does comprise The greatest part, and on the furface lies. But this is falfe; or through the weighty mill, From broken corn would bloody drops diftil; Or fome fuch parts as in our bodies grow; From herbs and flow'rs a milky juice would flow; In broken clods each fearching eye might fee Some lurking, fcatter'd herb, or leaf, or tree; And in cleft wood, and broken sticks, admire Smoke, afhes, flame, and little sparks of fire. But fince, on ftricteft fearch, no parts appear, We must not fondly fancy they are there; That bodies are compos'd of fuch combin'd; 909 But common feeds in various order join'd.

But you will answer thus: 'Tis often known,
That stately trees, on lofty mountains grown,
When beaten by a furious fouthern blast,
Grow warm and hot, and fo take fire at laft.
All this we grant :-

Yet there's no actual fire, but feeds of heat,
Which, dafh'd together, all this flame beget.
For if in wood fuch actual flame were held,
How could it for one moment be conceal'd? 910
It ftraight would fhow its mighty force, and burn;
And shrubs, and trees, and all to ashes turn.

And hence, as we difcours'd before, we find
It matters much with what first feeds are join'd;
Or how, or what pofition they maintain,
What motion give, and what receive again;
And that the feeds remaining ftill the fame,
Their order chang`d, of wood are turn'd to flame.
Juft as the letters little change affords,
Ignis and Ligna, two quite different words. 920
Befides, if you fuppofe no frame could spring,
Unless the principles were like the thing,
The fame in nature feeds are loft; for then
Some feeds would laugh, and weep, and laugh
again;

With vi'lent grin distort their little face,
And prefently drop briny tears apace.

Now what remains obferve; diftinctly mark;
I know 'tis hard; 'tis intricate, and dark :
But pow'rful hope of praife ftill fpurs me on;
I'm eager; and 'tis time that I were gone. 930

I feel, I rifing feel poetic heats,

And, now infpir'd, trace o'er the mufes' feats,
Untrodden yet: 'tis fweet to vifit first
Untouch'd and virgin ftreams, and quench my
thirst;

'Tis fweet to crop fresh flow'rs, and get a crown
For new and rare inventions of my own;
So noble, great, and gen'rous the defign,
That none of all the mighty tuneful nine
Shall grace a head with laurels like to mine.
For, firft, I teach great things in lofty strains, 940
And loose men from religion's grievous chains;
Next, though my fubje&t's dark, my verfe is clear
And fweet, with fancy flowing ev'ry where;
And this defign'd: for as phyficians use,
In giving children draughts of bitter juice,
To make them take it, tinge the cup with sweet,
To cheat the lip: this first they eager meet,
And then drink on, and take the bitter draught;
And so are harmlessly deceiv'd, not caught:
For, by this means, they get their health, their
ease,

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Their vigour, ftrength, and baffle the disease.
So, fince our methods of philofophy
Seem harsh to fome; fince most our maxims fly,
I thought it was the fittest way to dress,
In pleafing verfe, these rigid principles,
With fancy fweet'ning them; to bribe thy mind
To read my books, and lead it on to find
The nature of the world, the rise of things,
And what vaft profit too, that knowledge brings,
Now, fince my former various reafons fhow,
That feeds are folid, and eternal too;
Let's next inquire, if infinite or no?
Likewife, if void and space do fomewhere end?
Or, without bound, t'immensity extend?

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The all is ev'ry way immenfely wide, Or else it would have bounds on ev'ry fide. Now, what can be a bound, but that which lies Beyond the body, whofe extreme it is? That nought's beyond the all, ev'n common fenfe Declares therefore the all must be immenfe. 970 Thus ftand on any quarter of the space, That's nothing; 'tis immenfe from ev'ry place. But grant it finite.

Suppose a man on the extremeft part;

Suppofe him ftand and ftrive to throw a dart; The dart would forward fly, or, hinder'd, stay: Choose which you will, the reafon's good each

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So earth the feas, and feas the earth controul;
But there is nothing that can bound the whole.
Wherefore 'tis fuch, that did swift light'ning fly
Through the vast space to all eternity,
No utmost part, no end would e'er be found,
So vaftly wide it is, and without bound.

Again; nature's eternal laws provide,
That the vast all fhould be immensely wide,
Boundlefs and infinite, because they place
Body as bound to void, to body space;
By mutual bounding making both immenfe :
For did they not each other bound, but one
Were infinite; for inftance, fpace alone;

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And by that nat'ral preffure this whole frame
Might be maintain'd, its order still the same,
Without external impulse; high and low
Would always be as firmly join'd as now;
And their own fite their diff'rent place poffefs,
Since all unto one common centre prefs.
They farther teach, that pond'rous weights below
Unto their refting places upwards go:
And as our shadows in fmooth streams appear,
So feet to feet fome animals walk there; 1061
Yet can no fooner fall into thofe skies
That lie beneath, than we to heav'n can rise.
When Phoebus climbs their eaft, the feeble light
Of ftars peeps forth, and beautifies our night.

But this ridic'lous dream, this fancy fprings
From ign'rance, blind in principles of things.
For fince the void is infinite, the space
Immense; how can there be a middle place?
Or grant there were-

Why may not bodies end their tedious race,
And stop as well in any other place,
As there? For ev'ry part of empty space,
Or midst or not, muft equally allow

Nor man, nor earth, nor heav'n, nor could the To pond'rous movents easy passage through : fea,

Nor bodies of the gods one moment be;

For feeds of things, their union all destroy'd,
Would fly diffolv'd and fcatter'd through the
void;

Or rather into things had ne'er combin'd,
Because, once parted, they had never join'd. 1020
For fure unthinking feeds did ne'er dispose
Themselves by counsel, nor their order choofe;
Nor any compacts made how each should move,
But from eternal through the vacuum ftrove,
Variously mov'd and turn'd, until, at last,
Moft forts of motion and of union past,
By chance to that convenient order hurl'd,
Which frame the beings that compofe the world.
And these fame feeds, now orderly maintain'd,
In the convenient motions they have gain'd, 1030
Is a fufficient caufe why fertile carth,

By fun-beams quicken'd, gives new fruits their birth;

Why rivers ftill the greedy deep fupply;
Why beafts increase, why fun and moon ne'er die.
Which could not be, unless fupplies ftill came
From the vast mass, and propp'd the finking frame.
As beafts, depriv'd of food, fo things must die,
As foon as matter fails of juft fupply.

Nor can external ftrokes preferve the whole;
Sometimes they may the hafly flight controul 1040
Of fome fmall part, till others come and join,
And, taking hold, into one mafs combine;
But very oft they must rebound, and then
The principles of things may break the chain,
And get their former liberty again.

Nay, that thefe ftrokes might be, this lafting fight, The mass of matter must be infinite. 'Tis certain then, that there must come fupply From the vast mafs, repairing things that die. But fcorn their dreams, who fondly can believe, 1050

And teach, that all things to the middle strive;

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1070

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For there's no place, to which by nature preft,
Seeds lofe their force of weight and freely reft;
Nor empty space can prop the feeds, nor stay
Their motion: 'tis its nature to give way:
In bodies then there lies no fond defire
To feek the midfl which keeps this frame entire.
Befides, they grant not all, but only thofe
Which heavy water and dull earth compose,
Strive to the centre: but that two retire,
Endeav'ring from it as light air and fire;
Whence ftars, thofe feeble ornaments of night,
Are nourish'd, and gay Phœbus' fiercer light:
Because the flame which from the midft retires,
When got on high combines its featter'd fires.
But how could an'mals live, how leaves on branch-
es bud,
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If earthly parts rofe not, and gave them food?
Then they contend, the highest heav'n, around
All things enclofing, is of all the bound;
Elfe the world's walls, like fwiftest flames would
fly

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Through the vast space; the fabric of the sky
Confus'dly falling, lower buildings meet;
Elfe faithlefs earth forfake our trembling feet;
And all things both in heav'n and earth destroy'd,
Confus'dly fcatter through the boundless void;
And in one moment ev'ry thing deface,
But unfeen atoms, and vaft empty space :
For wherefoe'er the fabric does begin
To fail, there greedy death will enter in,
And through the ruinous breach, the violent course,
Of rapid matter rufh with mighty force.

This learnt, 'tis no uneafy task to know
The rest: I'll lead thee on, and clearly fhow
The pride of nature, and philofophy

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Her greatest works, and please thy curious eye.
The walk is pleasant, 'tis an easy way,
All bright and clear, for things will things betray
By mutual light; and we, from one thing known,
To hidden truths fuccessfully go on.

NOTES ON BOOK I.

LUCRETIUS begins his poem with an invocation | his fpite to religion, and scatters bitter reflections

of Venus, a gay and beautiful goddess, a friend of Mars, and, as the fabies fay, fometimes too immodeftly familiar with him but by whose power all animals are generated; by whofe charms all nature is governed; and who alone can give all beauty and gracefulness. He therefore, makes choice of her as the fittest patron for a man, who is going to treat of the Nature of Things: he afks of her to befrow fmoothnefs on his verfe, and to procure a peace for Rome, which the may easily obtain from her dreadful fervant the god of war. For, while the republic was engaged in arms, neither himself nor his Memmius, to whom he inTcribes this poem, could find leifure to attend to the fludies of philofophy. Now, whatever may be the opinion of others, he, by this invocation, excellently well performs the part of a poet, who intends to treat of nature and of an Epicurean philofopher likewife: for he derides while he invokes; and, as we seldom find a more beautiful, fo we never can a more reproachful image of Venus and of Mars. But they feem too wittily pious, who believed that the poet, a profeffed enemy to Providence, was compelled by the Deity, as it were in fport and derifion, to implore the aid of a most notorious goddefs: nor are others lefs trifling, who obferve, that Venus took care of gardens; and, therefore, was the most proper patronefs for the Epicureans, who chiefly dwelt, or at least spent most of their time in gardens. Nor they neither, who difcover, I know not what mysteries, that lie concealed under the names of Venus, Mars, Calus, &c. Such trifles are beneath the difdainful and foaring wit of Lucretius; for, as Cicero tells us in the first book of the Nature of the Gods, fect. 59. the Epicureans defpifed the myfteries of the ancients no lefs than they did their religion. Hence, too, the grammarians, with their Venus Genetrix, unless they will allow Lu cretius to have been infpired with fo divine and prophetic a fury, as to have forefeen that Venus would one day be honoured with that title by Julius Cæfar. We need not then look any farther for a reafon for the invocation. Lucretius was a poet, and therefore neglected not the rules of his art; an Epicurean, and therefore craftily conformed with the fuperftition of his country: befides, the practice of the poets is not more obvious, than the wantonnefs of the Epicureans is notorious and, therefore, both like a poet, and according to the principles of his philofophy too, he might very well apply himself to Venus, that is, to the common natural appetite to procreation, which nevertheless he treats as a goddess, and gives her all her titles, as if he really expected fome alliance from her; yet, even here he fhows

on the then fafhionable devotion.

Ver. 1. We learn from Cicero, in book iii. of the Nature of the Gods, that there were four of this name. The two chief of them were she who was born of the froth of the fea, and another who was daughter of Jupiter and Dione. They are often coufounded one for the other, both in regard to their actions and their name: for the Greeks called either of them Aphrodite, from aggs, froth: but the Latins, Venus, because, as the fame Cicero fays, " ad omnes veniat," he comes to all; for he was the goddess of pleasure; " & trahit fua quemque voluptas."

Ver. 2. Because the Romans deduced their ori gin from Æneas, who was the fon of Venus by Anchifes.

Ver. 9. Because the earth produces flowers and fruits of all kinds and colours.

his

Ver. 10. This and the four following verfes are an improvement of our translator upon author, who only fays,

-tibi fuaveis dædala Tellus Submittit Flores

Which thought is fully expreffed in the two im mediately preceding verfes.

Ver. 14. He means Arabia Felix, a country that produces fo great an abundance of aromatic fpices, that when they are in bloom, their fragrancy may be perceived at a great distance off st fea. Thus Milton, in his Paradise Loft,

-As when to them, who fail
Beyond the Cape of Hope, and now have past
Mozambic, off at fea, north-east winds bear
Saban odours from the spicy shore
Of Araby the bleft, with fuch delay
Well-pleas'd they flack their courfe, and many a
league

Pleas'd with the grateful smell old ocean smiles.
And Waller in like manner;

So we th' Arabian coaft do know
At distance, when the spices blow:
By the rich odour taught to steer,
Though neither day nor stars ́appear.
Pliny fays, that the inhabitants of this country
ule no wood but what is fweet-fcented; and that
they even drefs their meat with that of the trees
from which they diftil the frankincense and myrrh.
"Nec alia ligni genera in ufu funt, quam odorata;
cibofq. coquunt Turis ligno, & myrrha," lib. 12.
cap. 17.

Ver. 19. From this paffage of our poet, Virgil has borrowed part of his excellent defcription of the fpring, which we find in Georg. 2. ver. 328.

Avia tum refonant avibus virgulta canoris,
Et venerem certis repetunt armenta diebus.
Parturit almus ager: Zephyriq. tepentibus auris
Laxant arva finus: fuperat tener omnibus humor :
Inque novos foles audent fe gramina tuto
Credere; nec metuit furgentes pampinus Auftros,
Aut actum cœlo magnis Aquilonibus imbrem;
Sed trudit gemmas, & frondes explicat omnes.
Then joyous birds frequent the lonely grove,
And beafts, by nature ftung, renew their love;
Then fields the blades of bury'd corn disclose,
And while the balmy western spirit blows,
Earth to the breath her bofom dares expose.
With kindly moisture then the plants abound,
The grafs fecurely fprings above the ground.
The tender twig fhoots upward to the skies,
And on the faith of the new fun relies.
The [werving vines on the tall elm prevail,
Unhurt by fouthera fhow'rs, or northern hail
They fpread their gems the genial warmth to fhare,
And boldly trust their buds in open air. Dryden

Ver. 21. The weft wind, fo called " à favore, quia favet genituræ," because it favours and helps forward the generation and production of things.

Ver. 37. The confused and unordered heap of matter, of which the poets fuppofed all things were made in the beginning. Hence Milton calls it,

The womb of nature, and perhaps her grave.
And Ovid, Metamorph. 1. ver. 7.
—dixere chaos; rudis indigeftaque moles,
Nec quicquam nifi pondus iners; congeftaque
codem

Non bene junЯarum discordia semina rerum.

-Rude undigested mafs;

A lifeleless lump, unfashion'd and unfram'd, Of jarring feeds, and justly Chaos nam'd. Dryden. Chaos was likewise the first of the gods, according to Hefiod, in Theogon. ver. 116, where he fets up Chaos, Tellus, and Amor, for the progenitors of the gods.

Ver. 4. C. Memmius Gemellus, with whom Lucretius had travelled to Athens, where they ftudied philofophy together; and they were ever afterwards very intimate. He was defcended of the noble family of the Memmii, who derived their extraction from the Trojans, as Virgil witnelles, Æn. s. ver. 116.

Mox Italus Mneftheus, genus à quo nomine Memmi.

to Greece, where he died in exile. Whoever defires to know more of him, may confult Gifanius, in his Differtation de Genti Memmia.

Ver. 46. The fon of Jupiter and Juno, or of Juno only without a father; as Minerva was of Jupiter only without a mother. She is faid to have conceived him by touching a certain flower, which Flora fhowed her for that purpose.

Ver. 49. The court of Venus, who herself was called Paphia, from Paphos a city of Cyprus, where fhe had a stately temple. It is now called Baffo.

Ver. 58. Lucretius, a few years before his death, was an eye-witnefs of the mad administration of affairs in the time of Clodius and Catiline, who gave fuch a blow to the republic of Rome, as occafioned its total fubverfion, which happened not long after. And this is what he speaks of in thefe fix verfes

H

lo, the god of learning. See the note on ver. 152 Ver. 59. Becaufe that tree was facred to Apolof the fixth book.

Ver. 60. For as Cicero fays, "Nemo bene potest inter Belli ftrepitus, ac plebis feditiones, æqua animo philofophari," Tufcul. 1. No man can well apply his mind to philofophy, amidst the noife of war and the feditions of the people.

Ver, 64. In these fourteen verfes, he unfolds to his Menimius, whofe attention he befpeaks, and wishes him free from all cares and anxieties, the argument of his future difputation: and tells him, he is going to treat of the nature of the heavens. and of the gods; as likewife concerning the first principles, of which all things are made, and into which they are again refolved. For, as to the gods, fays he, they enjoy a blissful eafe and idlenefs, and are exempt from all cares and bufinefs; nor did they, as moft philofophers believe, either Deorum immortalitate nemo dubitavit: quod au make the world, or do they take care of it. "De tem æternum beatumq. fit, id non habere ipfum negotii quicquam, nec exhibere alteri; itaque neque ira neque gratia teneri, quod, que talia effent, imbecilia effent omnia." No man doubts of the immortality of the gods: but whatever is happy and eternal, must have nothing to do itfelf, nor find out employment for others: thus it will ex. empt itself from anger and gratitude, to either of which, whatever is fubject, must be frail and imperfect, fays Epicurus in Cicero, lib. 1. de Nat.

Deor.

Ver. 76. He means the atoms. And let it fuffice to give notice once for all, that he calls them by feveral other names likewife: as corpufcles, elements, firft matter, first causes, first bodies, lit-, the bodies, &a.

Then Mueftheus, from whom the Memmian race. This C. Memmius, to whom Lucretius infcribes his poem, arrived to the dignity of Prætor, and Ver. 78. Here Lucretins begins his impiety. Had obtained Bithynia for his province; but was foon he contented humfelf with deriding only the fuperrecalled, being accused by Cæfar of mal-gefture inftitious devotion of the age he lived in; had he flophis office. However, not many years after his return to Rome, he came to be tribune of the people; and, in a little time, food candidate for the confulship: of which he not only failed, but being accused of bribery, was, even though Cicero plead ed in his defence, convicted of it, and banished in

ped there, and not propofed principles of irreligion drawn from the happinefs of the Deity, which, therefore, must be univerfal, and against all religion under whatsoever denomination: he might have been read with much profit and fatisfaction as an excellentfatirist against the heathen worship; for

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