Reconstruction by Way of the Soil

A Distant Mirror · Sử dụng giọng đọc Matt do AI tạo (từ Google)
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Guy Wrench takes us on a wide-ranging journey through the history of some of the world’s most important civilizations, concentrating on the relationship between humanity and the soil. He shows the reader how farming practices, and the care – or lack of care – with which the soil is treated have brought about both the rise and fall of civilizations, from the ancient Romans, to the Chinese, and the Muslim world.

 

This history by Guy Wrench is a wide-ranging history of the agricultural policies and politics of several (actually many) different cultures through history. The author looks for parallels and similarities between the rise and decline of the cultures he discusses, and what he finds is interesting, and educational.

     Guy Wrench’s politics, and also his optimism, shine through in his writing.This text has many merits as a historical survey.

 

“Our agriculture is wrongly based. It is a system largely directed at curing evils which it itself is responsible for. It is the wisdom of the country and the traditional farmers we need now; the wisdom of those who have built up long-lasting agriculture and whose wisdom lies in tradition. They have fashioned it through physical work and close and immediate observation; through the personal intimacy with nature which we have come to associate with the poet.

      In fact, peasant life is poetic, and it is so precisely because of this intimacy. The music, dance and art of peasants are the creative expression of their lives, and as such are characteristic of their environments and the land on which they live.

      Nothing collective or traditional, as peasant life is, originates from people separated from the soil, as are townfolk.

      The poems and essays that played a notable part in the country life of the Chinese, the Tibetan art which finds its way into every home, the sylvan setting of Japanese villages, of the Balinese and Burmese, the vocal harmony of Swiss peasants returning from their fields, the reproduction of floral beauty and colour in festive dress of so many countries; these are the product of the poet that lies in every peasant’s heart.

      It is this intimacy that inspires creativity in the poet, as the Greeks recognized in their choice of word for poet, namely, a ‘maker’ or creator, and which Dante voiced in the Divine Comedy, when he wrote that the poet was not the disciple of the imagination, but rather one who knows the secrets of nature.” – Guy Wrench

 

CONTENTS

Rome.
The Roman foods.
The Roman family.
Roman soil erosion.
Farmers and nomads.
Contrasting pictures.
Banks for the soil.
Economics of the soil.
The English peasant and agricultural labourer.
Nyasa.
Tanganyika.
Sind and Egypt.
Fragmentation.
East and West Indies.
German colonies: the mandates.
Russia, South Africa, Australia.
A kingdom of agricultural art in Europe.
An historical reconstruction.

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