C a t 0^ s Farm Management 



it. He should not be given to gad- 

 ding or conviviality, but should be 

 always sober. He should keep the 

 hands busy, and should see that they 

 do what the master has ordered. He 

 should not think that he knows more 

 than his master. The friends of the 

 master should be his friends, and he 

 should give heed to those whom the 

 master has recommended to him. He 

 should confine his religious practices 

 to church on Sunday,^ or to his own 

 house. 



He should lend money to no man 

 unbidden by the master, but what the 

 master has lent he should collect. He 

 should never lend any seed reserved 

 for sowing, feed, corn, wine, or oil, 

 but he should have relations with two 

 or three others farms with which he 

 can exchange things needed in emer- 

 gency. He should state his accounts 



1 "Compitalibus in compito," literally "the cross 

 roads altar on festival days." 



l35l 



