(100 pounds). The rivalry of the growers of fruit
was carried so far, that in elegant villas the fruit-chamber
lined with marble was not unfrequently fitted up at
the same time as a dining-room, and sometimes fine
fruit acquired by purchase was exhibited there as
of home growth. At this period the cherry from
Asia Minor and other foreign fruit-trees were first
planted in the gardens of Italy. The vegetable
gardens, the beds of roses and violets in Latium and
Campania, yielded rich produce, and the “market
for dainties” (-forum cupedinis-) by the side
of the Via Sacra, where fruits, honey, and chaplets
were wont to be exposed for sale, played an important
part in the life of the capital. Generally the
management of estates, worked as they were on the planter-system,
had reached in an economic point of view a height scarcely
to be surpassed. The valley of Rieti, the region
round the Fucine lake, the districts on the Liris
and Volturnus, and indeed Central Italy in general,
were as respects husbandry in the most flourishing
condition; even certain branches of industry, which
were suitable accompaniments of the management of
an estate by means of slaves, were taken up by intelligent
landlords, and, where the circumstances were favourable,
inns, weaving factories, and especially brickworks
were constructed on the estate. The Italian
producers of wine and oil in particular not only supplied
the Italian markets, but carried on also in both articles
a considerable business of transmarine exportation.
A homely professional treatise of this period compares
Italy to a great fruit-garden; and the pictures which
a contemporary poet gives of his beautiful native
land, where the well-watered meadow, the luxuriant
corn-field, the pleasant vine-covered hill are fringed
by the dark line of the olive-trees—where
the “ornament” of the land, smiling in
varied charms, cherishes the loveliest gardens in
its bosom and is itself wreathed round by food-producing
trees— these descriptions, evidently faithful
pictures of the landscape daily presented to the eye
of the poet, transplant us into the most flourishing
districts of Tuscany and Terra di Lavoro. The
pastoral husbandry, it is true, which for reasons formerly
explained was always spreading farther especially
in the south and south-east of Italy, was in every
respect a retrograde movement; but it too participated
to a certain degree in the general progress of agriculture;
much was done for the improvement of the breeds, e.
g. asses for breeding brought 60,000 sesterces (600
pounds), 100,000 (1000 pounds), and even 400,000 (4000
pounds). The solid Italian husbandry obtained
at this period, when the general development of intelligence
and abundance of capital rendered it fruitful, far
more brilliant results than ever the old system of
small cultivators could have given; and was carried
even already beyond the bounds of Italy, for the Italian
agriculturist turned to account large tracts in the
provinces by rearing cattle and even cultivating corn.