Idyll X

Idyll X, sometimes called Θερισταί ('The Reapers') or Εργατίναι ('The Labourers'), is a bucolic poem by the 3rd-century BC Greek poet Theocritus.

[1] The poem takes the form of a dialogue between the old foreman Milon, as he levels the swathes of corn, and his languid and love-worn companion, the reaper Bucaeus.

[2][3] The characters of this pastoral are two reapers, Milon, the man of experience, and Bucaeus, called also Bucus or Buttus, the lovesick youth.

[1] There was at least one traditional reaping-song which told how Lityerses, son of Midas, of Celaenae in Phrygia, after entertaining strangers' hospitality, made them reap with him till evening, when he cut off their heads and hid their bodies in the sheaves.

[1] According to Andrew Lang, the verses in which Milon defends his 'gipsy' love "have been the keynote of much later poetry", including the fourth book of Lucretius and the Misanthrope of Molière.

Silver stater of Metapontum : 400 BC. Barley ear and grasshopper (rev.)
They all call thee a 'gipsy', gracious Bombyca, and 'lean', and 'sunburnt', 'tis only I that call thee 'honey-pale'