Lippincott's Magazine, August, 1885 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 265 pages of information about Lippincott's Magazine, August, 1885.

Lippincott's Magazine, August, 1885 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 265 pages of information about Lippincott's Magazine, August, 1885.

“We came suddenly one day upon a party in a kind of Cheap-Jack van,” she wrote,—­“gayly-dressed people, tricked off in smart finery, and larking like a lot of Ramsgate tradesmen on the public road.  One of the impudent creatures made a trumpet of his great ugly fist and spelt out the name of the hotel at which they were stopping, and then put his hand to his ear, as if to listen for the response.  Expecting me to tell them anything about myself!  But I flatter myself that I was a match for them.  I just got out my umbrella and shot it up in their very faces as we passed, in a way not to be mistaken.  And—­would you believe it?—­the rude wretches called out, ’The shower is over now! and ’What’s the price of starch?’ and roared with laughing.”  A highly-colored description of “a visit to a great Dissenting stronghold, Marbury Park,” followed:  “I was immensely curious to see one of these characteristic national exhibitions of hysteria, ignorance, superstition, and immorality, called a ‘camp-meeting.’ to which the Americans of all classes flock annually by the thousands, so I quite insisted upon being taken to one, though my friends would have got out of it if they could.  I fancy they were very ashamed of it; and they had need to be.  I will not attempt to describe it in detail here,—­you will hear what I have said of it in my diary,—­but a more glaringly vulgar, intensely American performance you can’t fancy.  I have made a number of sketches of the grounds, the tents and tent-life, with the people bathing and dressing and all that in the most exposed manner; of the pavilion, where the roaring and ranting is done; and of the great revivalist who was holding forth when I got there, and who had got such a red face and seemed so excited that it is my belief he was regularly screwed, though my friends denied it, of course.  With such a preacher, you can ‘realize,’ as they say, what the people were like.  A regular Derby-day crowd having a religious saturnalia,—­that is what it is.  It would not be allowed at home, I am sure.  Disgusting!  One can’t wonder at the state of society in America when one sees what their religion is.  An unpleasant incident occurred to me while sketching in the pavilion, that shows what I have often pointed out to you,—­the radicalism and odious impertinence of this people.  I was just putting the finishing-touches to my picture of the Rev. (?) ‘Galusha Wickers’ (the revivalist:  such names as these Americans have!), when I heard a voice behind me saying, ’Lor!  Why, that’s splendid! perfectly splendid!  Well, I declare, you’ve got him to a t.  Lemmy see.’  And, if you please, a hand was thrust over my shoulder and the sketch seized, without so much as a ‘By your leave.’  Can you fancy a more unwarrantable, insufferable liberty?  But they are all alike over here.  I turned about, and saw a woman who was examining the reverend revivalist with much satisfaction.  ‘Well, you have got him, to be sure,’ she said, returning my

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Lippincott's Magazine, August, 1885 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.