Georgics, Book 2, lines 458 - 474

The farmer’s happy lot

by Virgil

Virgil praises the ease and simple privileges of a farmer’s life. The picture is a romantic one: one doubts that farmers themselves would see things this way, and no passage in the Georgics illustrates more clearly that this is definitely a city-dweller’s view of the countryside.

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O fortunatos nimium, sua si bona norint,
agricolas! quibus ipsa procul discordibus armis
fundit humo facilem victum iustissima tellus.
si non ingentem foribus domus alta superbis
mane salutantum totis vomit aedibus undam,
nec varios inhiant pulchra testudine postis
inlusasque auro uestis Ephyreiaque aera,
alba neque Assyrio fucatur lana veneno,
nec casia liquidi corrumpitur usus olivi;
at secura quies et nescia fallere vita,
diues opum uariarum, at latis otia fundis,
speluncae vivique lacus, at frigida tempe
mugitusque boum mollesque sub arbore somni
non absunt; illic saltus ac lustra ferarum
et patiens operum exiguoque adsueta iuventus,
sacra deum sanctique patres; extrema per illos
Iustitia excedens terris vestigia fecit.

Farmers would be too happy, if they understood the good things they have! For whom the just land itself pours forth from the soil an easy living, far from clashing arms! If they have no lofty mansion, disgorging a great wave of clients come to greet them in the morning from all its grand halls through its haughty gates, and if they don’t pant for doors beautifully inlaid with tortoiseshell, Corinthian bronzes and clothes threaded with gold, and if their white wool is not red with Assyrian dye, and their bright oil uncorrupted by aromatics, yet safety, peace, a life free of dishonesty, rich in abundance of all sorts, rest in open country, grottoes, pools of living water, cool vales, the lowing of cattle and gentle sleep under a tree, all these they have; there lie forests and haunts of game, the young are used to hard work and to frugal life, the Gods are reverenced and the old respected; among them Justice left her last traces as she left the Earth.

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More Poems by Virgil

  1. Dido and Aeneas: Hell hath no fury …
  2. Turnus is lured away from battle
  3. Jupiter’s prophecy
  4. Storm at sea!
  5. Juno’s anger
  6. Aeneas prepares to tell Dido his story
  7. Signs of bad weather
  8. Aeneas sees Marcellus, Augustus’s tragic heir
  9. Aeneas finds Dido among the shades
  10. The Fury Allecto blows the alarm
  11. The Syrian hostess
  12. Into battle
  13. The Trojans prepare to set sail from Carthage
  14. Charon, the ferryman
  15. Palinurus the helmsman is lost
  16. Juno is reconciled
  17. Aeneas and Dido meet
  18. Dido falls in love
  19. Virgil’s poetic temple to Caesar
  20. The Trojan Horse enters the city
  21. Aeneas’s oath
  22. Aeneas arrives in Italy
  23. What is this wooden horse?
  24. Omens for Princess Lavinia
  25. More from Virgil’s farming Utopia
  26. Helen in the darkness
  27. Dido’s story
  28. The journey to Hades begins
  29. The battle for Priam’s palace
  30. The death of Priam
  31. Catastrophe for Rome?
  32. Virgil begins the Georgics
  33. Fire strikes Aeneas’s fleet
  34. The Harpy’s prophecy
  35. Aeneas comes to the Hell of Tartarus
  36. Vulcan’s forge
  37. Rites for the allies’ dead
  38. Aeneas is wounded
  39. The farmer’s starry calendar
  40. Rumour
  41. Anchises’s ghost invites Aeneas to visit the underworld
  42. Aeneas tours the site of Rome
  43. How Aeneas will know the site of his city
  44. The portals of sleep
  45. King Mezentius meets his match
  46. Turnus the wolf
  47. The death of Pallas
  48. Laocoon warns against the Trojan horse
  49. New allies for Aeneas
  50. Aeneas’s vision of Augustus
  51. Aeneas joins the fray
  52. The Aeneid begins
  53. Venus speaks
  54. Juno throws open the gates of war
  55. Aristaeus’s bees
  56. Dido’s release
  57. Hector visits Aeneas in a dream
  58. The death of Priam
  59. Aeneas prepares for a hopeless fight
  60. Virgil predicts a forthcoming birth and a new golden age
  61. The infant Camilla
  62. Aeneas saves his son and father, but at a cost
  63. The Trojan horse opens
  64. Love is the same for all
  65. Sea-nymphs
  66. Souls awaiting punishment in Tartarus, and the crimes that brought them there.
  67. The natural history of bees
  68. Mourning for Pallas
  69. A Fury rouses Turnus to war
  70. Virgil’s perils on the sea
  71. King Latinus grants the Trojans’ request
  72. Aeneas learns the way to the underworld
  73. The death of Dido
  74. Turnus at bay
  75. Dido and Aeneas: royal hunt and royal affair
  76. Aeneas rescues his Father Anchises
  77. Aeneas’s ships are transformed
  78. Mercury’s journey to Carthage
  79. The death of Euryalus and Nisus
  80. The boxers
  81. In King Latinus’s hall
  82. The Trojans reach Carthage
  83. Help for Father Aeneas from Father Tiber
  84. Cassandra is taken
  85. Aeneas reaches the Elysian Fields
  86. Laocoon and the snakes
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