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EMERSON IN HIS
FAMILY
74. Photograph of Ralph Waldo Emerson reading with adolescents Edward and Edith, from Emerson family photograph album. Album from the estate of Amelia Forbes Emerson, 1982. “He liked to read and recite to us poems or prose passages a little
above our heads, and on Sunday mornings often brought into the dining-room
something rather old for us, and read aloud from Southey’s Chronicle of
the Cid, or Froissart’s Chronicles, or Burke’s speeches, or amusing passages
from Sydney Smith or Charles Lamb or Lowell. One rainy Sunday when
we could not go to walk we got permission from our mother to play Battledore
and Shuttlecock for a little while, but no sooner did the sound of the
shuttlecock on the parchment bathead ring through the house than we heard
the study door open and our father’s stride in the entry. He came
in and said: ‘That sound was never heard in New England before on Sunday
and must not be in my house. Put them away.’ ”—Edward Waldo Emerson,
Emerson
in Concord.
No image in this online display may be reproduced in
any form, including electronic, without permission from the Curator of
Special Collections of the Concord Free Public Library.
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