OCR Text |
Show CHAP. V. THE BOWERY.-MUSIC-DRESS. 259 tion as to latitude and longitude, and after reminiscences of country and town chapels in that land where it is said, had the Psalmist heard his own psalms, " I n furious mood he would have tore 'em." I was told that "profane"-i. e., operatic and other-music is performed at worship, as in the Italian cathedrals, where they are unwilling that Sathanas should monopolize the prettiest airs; on this occasion, however, only hymns were sung. SOUTH END OF THE TAJJBRNACLE, We-the judge's' son and I-took our seats on the benches of the eighth ward, where we could see the congregation flocking in, a proceeding which was not over-some coming from considerable distances-till 10 15 A.M. The people were all endiman-chis; many a pretty face peeped from the usual sun-bonnet with its long curtain, though the "mushroom" and the "pork-pie" had found their way over the plains, and trim figures were clad in neat stuff dresses, sometimes silk: in very few cases there was a little faded finery-gauze, feathers, and gaudy colors-such as one may see on great festivals in an Old-Country village. The men were as decently attired: the weather, being hot, had caused many of them to leave their coats at home, and to open their vests; the costume, however, looked natural to working-men, and there was no want of cleanliness, such as sometimes lurks behind a bulwark of buttons. The elders and dignitaries on the platform affected coats of black broadcloth, and were otherwise respectably dress- |