Page - 492 - in The Complete Plato
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one another; and there flows out of and into them, as into basins, a vast tide of
water, and huge subterranean streams of perennial rivers, and springs hot and
cold, and a great fire, and great rivers of fire, and streams of liquid mud, thin
or thick (like the rivers of mud in Sicily, and the lava streams which follow
them), and the regions about which they happen to flow are filled up with
them. And there is a swinging or see-saw in the interior of the earth which
moves all this up and down, and is due to the following cause:—There is a
chasm which is the vastest of them all, and pierces right through the whole
earth; this is that chasm which Homer describes in the words,—
‘Far off, where is the inmost depth beneath the earth;’
and which he in other places, and many other poets, have called Tartarus.
And the see-saw is caused by the streams flowing into and out of this chasm,
and they each have the nature of the soil through which they flow. And the
reason why the streams are always flowing in and out, is that the watery
element has no bed or bottom, but is swinging and surging up and down, and
the surrounding wind and air do the same; they follow the water up and down,
hither and thither, over the earth—just as in the act of respiration the air is
always in process of inhalation and exhalation;—and the wind swinging with
the water in and out produces fearful and irresistible blasts: when the waters
retire with a rush into the lower parts of the earth, as they are called, they flow
through the earth in those regions, and fill them up like water raised by a
pump, and then when they leave those regions and rush back hither, they
again fill the hollows here, and when these are filled, flow through
subterranean channels and find their way to their several places, forming seas,
and lakes, and rivers, and springs. Thence they again enter the earth, some of
them making a long circuit into many lands, others going to a few places and
not so distant; and again fall into Tartarus, some at a point a good deal lower
than that at which they rose, and others not much lower, but all in some
degree lower than the point from which they came. And some burst forth
again on the opposite side, and some on the same side, and some wind round
the earth with one or many folds like the coils of a serpent, and descend as far
as they can, but always return and fall into the chasm. The rivers flowing in
either direction can descend only to the centre and no further, for opposite to
the rivers is a precipice.
Now these rivers are many, and mighty, and diverse, and there are four
principal ones, of which the greatest and outermost is that called Oceanus,
which flows round the earth in a circle; and in the opposite direction flows
Acheron, which passes under the earth through desert places into the
Acherusian lake: this is the lake to the shores of which the souls of the many
go when they are dead, and after waiting an appointed time, which is to some
492
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book The Complete Plato"
The Complete Plato
- Title
- The Complete Plato
- Author
- Plato
- Date
- ~347 B.C.
- Language
- English
- License
- PD
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 1612
- Keywords
- Philosophy, Antique, Philosophie, Antike, Dialogues, Metaphysik, Metaphysics, Ideologie, Ideology, Englisch
- Categories
- Geisteswissenschaften
- International