Page:Textile fabrics; a descriptive catalogue of the collection of church-vestments, dresses, silk stuffs, needle-work and tapestries, forming that section of the Museum (IA textilefabricsde00soutrich).pdf/19

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
  • lendi mos." Got in either method the fleeces were, from the earliest

times, spun by women from the distaff. At last so wishful were the growers to improve the coats of their lambs that they clothed them in skins; a process which not only fined the staple of the wool, but kept it clean, and better fitted it for being washed and dyed, as we are told by many ancient writers, such as Horace and the great agricultural authority Varro. In uttering his wish for a sweet peaceful home in his old age, either at Tibur, or on the banks of the pleasant Gelæsus, thus sings the poet:

Dulce pellitis ovibus Gelæsi
Flumen.[1]

And what were these "oves pellitæ," or "tectæ" and "molles," as they were called, in contradistinction to "hirtæ," we understand from Varro, who says, "oves pellitæ; quæ propter lanæ bonitatem, ut sunt Taren-*tinæ et Atticæ, pellibus integuntur, ne lana inquinetur quo minus vel infici rectè possit, vel lavari ac parari."[2]

This latter very ancient daily work followed by women of all degrees, spinning from off the distaff, was taught to our Anglo-Saxon sisters among all ranks of life, from the king's daughter downwards. In his life of Eadward the elder, A.D. 901, Malmesbury writes: "Filias suas ita instituerat ut literis omnes in infantia maxime vacarent, mox etiam colum et acum exercere consuescerent, ut his artibus pudice impubem virginitatem transigerent."[3] The same occupation is even now a female favourite in many countries on the Continent, particularly so all through Italy. Long ago it bestowed the name of spindle-tree on the Euonymus plant, on account of the good spindles which its wood affords, and originated the term "spinster," yet to be found in our law-books as meaning an unmarried woman even of the gentlest blood, while every now and then from the graves that held the ashes of our sisters of the British and the Anglo-Saxon epochs, are picked up the elaborately ornamented leaden whorls which they fastened at the lower end of their spindles to give them a due weight and steadiness as they twirled them round.

Beginning with the British islands on the west, and going eastward on a line running through the Mediterranean sea, and stretching itself out far into Asia, we find that the peoples who dwelt to the north of such a boundary wrought several of their garments out of sheep's wool, goats' hair, and beavers' fur, while those living to the south, including the

  1. Lyric. c. vi. vi.
  2. De Re Rustica, ii. 2.
  3. Gesta Regum Anglorum, t. i. lib. ii. p. 198, ed. Hardy.