I shall now proceed to add some necessary information re- lative to the moon, the winds, and certain signs and prognostics, in order that I may complete the observations I have to make with reference to the sidereal system. Virgil[1] has even gone so far, in imitation of Democritus, as to assign certain operations to certain days[2] of the moon; but my sole object shall be, as, indeed, it has been throughout this work, to consult that utility which is based upon a knowledge and appreciation of general principles.
All vegetable productions are cut, gathered, and housed to
more advantage while the moon is on the wane than while it
is on the increase. Manure must never be touched except
when the moon is on the wane; and land must be manured
more particularly while the moon is in conjunction, or else at
the first quarter. Take care to geld your boars, bulls, rams,
and kids, while the moon is on the wane. Put eggs under the
hen at a new moon. Make your ditches in the night-time,
when the moon is at full. Cover up the roots of trees, while
the moon is at full. Where the soil is humid, put in seed
The observation of the moon, in general, as already observed in
the Second Book,[3] is not so very easy, but what I
am about here to state even rustics will be able to comprehend:
so long as the moon is seen in the west, and during the earlier
hours of the night, she will be on the increase, and one half
of her disk will be perceived; but when the moon is seen to
rise at sun-set and opposite to the sun, so that they are both
perceptible at the same moment, she will be at fall. Again,
as often as the moon rises in the east, and does not give her
light in the earlier hours of the night, but shows herself
during a portion of the day, she will be on the wane, and one
half of her only will again be perceptible: when the moon has
ceased to be visible, she is in conjunction, a period known to
us as "interlunium."[4] During the conjunction, the moon will
he above the horizon the same time as the sun, for the whole
of the first day: on the second, she will advance upon the
night ten-twelfths of an hour and one-fourth of a twelfth;[5]
on the third day, the same as on the second, and * * * so on
in succession up to the fifteenth day, the same proportional parts
of an hour being added each day. On the fifteenth day she will
be above the horizon all night, and below it all day. On the
sixteenth, she will remain below the horizon ten-twelfths of
an hour, and one-fourth of a twelfth, at the first hour of the
night, and so on in the same proportion day after day, up to
the period of her conjunction; and thus, the same time which
by remaining under the horizon, she withdraws from the first
part of the night, she will add to the end of the night by
remaining above the horizon. Her revolutions, too, will
occupy thirty days one month, and twenty-nine the next, and
so on alternately. Such is the theory of the revolutions of
the moon.
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