Res Rustica
Columella, Lucius Junius Moderatus
Columella. On agriculture, Volume 1-2. Ash, Harrison Boyd; Foster, Edward Seymour; Heffner, Edward H., editors. Cambridge, MA; London: Harvard University Press; William Heinemann, Ltd., 1941.
Hos igitur, P. Silvine, priusquam cum agricolatione [*](filium et patrem SA. ) [*](virgilium R. ) [*](carmine R. a Regarded by Pliny (N.H. XVII. 199) as the most ancient and most distinguished husbandmen after Cato. b A contemporary of Varro and one of the speakers in Varro's agricultural treatise. c Marcus Terentius Varro. d A slave whose duty it was to guard his master's children, escort them to school, and perhaps give some elementary instruction at home. c Freedman and librarian of Augustus, and a writer of great versatility. Two works, dealing with mythology and astronomy, survive under his name. )
Usus et experientia dominantur in artibus, neque est ulla disciplina, in qua non peccando discatur.[*]()Nam ubi quid perperam administratum cessit [*]()improspere, vitatur quod fefellerat, illuminatque rectam viam docentis magisterium.
Quare nostra praecepta non consummare scientiam, sed adiuvare promittunt. Nec statim quisquam compos agricolationis erit his perlectis rationibus, nisi et obire eas voluerit et per facultates potuerit. Ideoque haec velut adminicula studiosis promittimus, non profutura per se sola, sed cum aliis.
Ac ne ista quidem praesidia, ut diximus, non adsiduus labor et experientia vilici, non facultates ac voluntas impendendi tantum pollent quantum vel una praesentia domini; quae nisi frequens operibus intervenerit, ut in exercitu cum abest imperator, cuncta cessant officia. Maximeque reor hoc significantem[*]()Poenum Magonem suorum scriptorum primordium talibus auspicatum sententiis: " Qui agrum paravit domum vendat, ne malit urbanum quam rusticum larem colere; cui magis cordi fuerit [*](quia R plerique. ) [*](discitur S. ) [*](cesserit R aliquot. ) [*](significante 8. a Cf. the maxim of Cato, 4, frons occipitio prior est; Pliny, N.H. XVIII. 31 frontemque domini plus prodesse quam occipitium; and Palladius, I. 6.1, praesentia domini provectus est agri. )