The Dead Trees of Interstate 5
September 29, 2021A Fentanyl Revenge for Opium?
October 7, 2021GUEST: M.D. Usher University of Vermont Professor of Classical Languages and Literature and Author of How to Be A Farmer:
An Ancient Guide to Life on the Land
They are called “classics” because they do not wear out with time – even with thousands of years of time!
The writers of the classics captured life as they saw it with the words of their day. If one is able to translate those ancient words into today’s words– or get someone else to do the translating– one can see that the more things change, the more they stay the same.
For one example, look back, way back, to what the shepherd Hesiod had to say, nearly 3,000 years ago, about character.
“The best man of all thinks out everything for himself, mulling over what is better later on, and in the end. And yet good, too, is he who heeds words well-spoken by another. But whoever neither thinks for himself nor listens to another when he takes something to heart is a useless person.”
Now I ask, has the wisdom of that observation dimmed over the nearly three millennium since it was written? Though there are some who think there is now no such thing as a useless person, they most likely have never been a farmer.
And speaking of farming, the ancients did a lot of writing about the subject. And as I thumb through the themes presented in How to Be A Farmer: An Ancient Guide to Life on the Land, I see many, if not most all, of the themes I have written and talked about in my travels up and down today’s Food Chain.
To see how the more things change, the more they stay the same, let’s open How to Be A Farmer and see how what was said about farming inancient times is pretty much the way farming is today.
Here to help us select from all the themes, translate them from the Greek and Latin into today’s American English, and introduce them to us, we have, from France’s Cote D’Azur, M.D. Usher, the author of How to Be A Farmer: An Ancient Guide to Life on the Land
Leave Comment Below: Does the more farming change, the more it stays the same?
Michael Olson’s Three Laws of the Food Chain
#1 Agriculture is the foundation upon which we build all our sand castles.
#2 The farther we go from the source of our food, the less control we have over what’s in that food.
#3 Cheap food isn’t! READ MORE