The Lyceum

A gathering place for engaging Emersonian content to educate & entertain.

FAMILY, EMERSON HOUSE, EVENTS LoLC FAMILY, EMERSON HOUSE, EVENTS LoLC

Edith Emerson Forbes

A biographical profile of Ralph Waldo & Lidian’s third child, Edith Emerson, who married William Hathaway Forbes in 1865. Sociable and well-organized, Edith continued to play a vital role in her parents’ and siblings’ lives after marriage, including overseeing the repairs of the family home after the 1872 fire and working with her father on assembling the poetry anthology Parnassus.

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CONCORD, EVENTS, FAMILY LoLC CONCORD, EVENTS, FAMILY LoLC

“Their flag to April’s breeze unfurled”: Emerson and April 19th

The opening battle in America’s war for independence took place at Concord’s Old North Bridge on April 19, 1775—an event later memorialized by Emerson as the “shot heard round the world.” On the 250th anniversary of that fateful day, we look back at the Emerson family’s connections to April 19th: from Ralph Waldo Emerson’s grandparents witnessing those first shots in 1775, to his role in Concord’s centennial celebrations in 1875.

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LECTURES, EVENTS, NATURE LoLC LECTURES, EVENTS, NATURE LoLC

The American Scholar: Emerson’s Call to Awaken American Thought

An examination of the themes and context of Emerson’s momentous 1837 speech, "An Oration, Delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society at Cambridge,” later retitled “The American Scholar.” At the time, Emerson was just embarking on his remarkable 40-year career as an essayist, poet and speaker. His mind was racing with new ideas designed to increase individual expression and promote the importance of nature to thought and literature, and the Transcendental Club was founded soon thereafter.

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WRITINGS, NATURE, EVENTS LoLC WRITINGS, NATURE, EVENTS LoLC

Mr. Emerson’s Journals

Selections from Ralph Waldo Emerson’s journals, which he kept throughout his life and which served as the basis for many of his essays, lectures, and poems. The journals were a platform for Emerson to evaluate and make decisions; to react to news, good or bad; and to form a record of the people he met and the places he visited.

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EMERSON HOUSE, EVENTS, FAMILY LoLC EMERSON HOUSE, EVENTS, FAMILY LoLC

Fire at the Emerson House

On July 24, 1872—150 years ago today—a fire started in the attic of the Emerson House and spread quickly. Neighbors rushed over to help, rescuing most of the family’s possessions and managing to save the house, although it was badly damaged. After the fire, friends raised funds to reconstruct the Emersons’ home, which still stands today with the structure intact and most of the original furnishings within.

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FRIENDS, EVENTS, LECTURES LoLC FRIENDS, EVENTS, LECTURES LoLC

The Man at the Top of the Stairs

A profile of U.S. Senator Charles Sumner, a noted abolitionist whose friendship with Ralph Waldo Emerson strengthened around their mutual antipathy for the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850. Through Sumner, Emerson met President Lincoln in 1862, and when Sumner died in 1874, Emerson was one of his pallbearers. A portrait of Sumner hangs on the second floor of the Emerson House.

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WRITINGS, EVENTS, FRIENDS LoLC WRITINGS, EVENTS, FRIENDS LoLC

Emerson and The Atlantic Monthly

In the spring of 1857, a group of like-minded men met at Boston’s Parker House Hotel brainstorming ideas for a new magazine. The co-founders of what would become The Atlantic Monthly included Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, James Russell Lowell, Oliver Wendell Holmes, and several others. The magazine—now known as The Atlantic—has been published continuously since its first issue in November 1857.

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