Page:Virgil's Pastorals, Georgics and Aeneis - Dryden (1709) - volume 1.pdf/255

Geor. I. Ev'n Holy-days and Feasts permission yield, To float the Meadows, or to fence the Field, To fire the Brambles, snare the Birds, and steep In wholsom Water-falls the woolly Sheep. And oft the drudging Ass is driv'n, with Toyl, To neighb'ring Towns with Apples and with Oyl: Returning late, and loaden home with Gain Of barter'd Pitch, and Hand-mills for the Grain. The lucky Days, in each revolving Moon, For Labour chuse: The Fifth be sure to shun; That gave the Furies and pale Pluto Birth, And arm'd, against the Skies, the Sons of Earth. With Mountains pil'd on Mountains, thrice they strove To scale the steepy Battlements of Jove: And thrice his Lightning and red Thunder play'd, And their demolish'd Works in Ruin laid. The Sev'nth is, next the Tenth, the best to join Young Oxen to the Yoke, and plant the Vine. Then Weavers stretch your Stays upon the Weft: The Ninth is good for Travel, bad for Theft. Some Works in dead of Night are better done; Or when the Morning Dew prevents the Sun. Parch'd Meads and Stubble mow, by Phœbe's Light; Which both require the Coolness of the Night: For Moisture then abounds, and Pearly Rains Descend in Silence to refresh the Plains. The Wife and Husband equally conspire, To work by Night, and rake the Winter Fire: