This bitter cold morning, when we entered the office, we
found that our good “Major” had provided us a New Year's treat of hot coffee.
Of course we all enjoyed it highly, and were very grateful to him; and when I
returned home, the first thing that met my eye was a box sent from the express
office. We opened it, and found it a Christmas box, filled with nice and
substantial things from a friend now staying in Buckingham County, for whom I
once had an opportunity of doing some trifling kindness. The Lord is certainly
taking care of us through His people. The refugees in some of the villages are
much worse off than we are. We hear amusing stories of a friend in an inland
place, where nothing can possibly be bought, hiring a skillet from a servant
for one dollar per month, and other cooking utensils, which are absolutely
necessary, at the same rate; another in the same village, whose health seems to
require that she should drink something hot at night, has been obliged
to resort to hot water, as she has neither tea, coffee, sugar, nor milk.
These ladies belong to wealthy Virginia families. Many persons have no meat on
their tables for mouths at a time; and they are the real patriots, who submit
patiently, and without murmuring, to any privation, provided the country is
doing well. The flesh-pots of Egypt have no charms for them; they look forward
hopefully to the time when their country shall be disenthralled, never caring
for the trials of the past or the present, provided they can hope for the
future.
SOURCE: Judith W. McGuire, Diary of a Southern
Refugee, During the War, p. 327-8
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