To-day we are all at home. It is amusing to see, as each
lady walks into the parlour, where we gather around the centre-table at night,
that her work-basket is filled with clothes to be repaired. We are a
cheerful set, notwithstanding. Our winding “reel,” too, is generally busy. L. has a very nice one, which
is always in the hands of one or the other, preparing cotton for knitting. We
are equal to German women in that line. Howitt says that throughout Germany,
wherever you see a woman, you see the “everlasting knitting;” so it is with
Confederate women. I only wish it was “everlasting,” for our poor soldiers in
their long marches strew the way with their wornout socks.
SOURCE: Judith W. McGuire, Diary of a Southern
Refugee, During the War, p. 195
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