IMAGE CITATION
Date: 1895 ca
Subject:
Orignal Work:
Publish/Print:
Place: Chapel Island, N.S.
Ownership/Collection: Legislative Library, Province House, Halifax
Source: Nova Scotia Museum, Halifax
Reference Number: P113/ N-12, 574
Image Use: Free for personal research and non-commercial educational use.
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The Nova Scotia Museum reserves the right to refuse requests.
IMAGE INFORMATION
"Early in the afternoon the tribe begins to gather for the principal event of the day, in fact, the most notable feature of the whole festival, the procession of St. Ann. The gayly bedecked shrine, containing the image, so reverenced by the pious Micmacs that the toes of the statue have been well-nigh worn away by frequent kissing, is borne by four solemn-faced maidens arrayed in white. Following these is a like number of young men, selected because of their good voices, and who are depended on to take the lead in the musical part of the exercises, consisting principally of the responses, the intoning of the psalms, and a few of the Church's chants." [Wilson, 1895:757.]
KEYWORDS
men; women; statues, religious; Catholicism; processions, religious; celebrations, religious; St. Anne's Day; Chapel Island; Nova Scotia