Shocking Corn   {Norfolk}

Shocking Corn {Norfolk}

Barley Harvest” barley and distance out of focus, “Shocking Corn,” same effect.”  ⎯ P.H. Emerson, Sept., 1889,  To The Student 


From Chapter X: Harvesting

Our second plate shows a harvest-scene on a Norfolk marsh. As a rule, but little wheat is grown on these lowland farms, the soil being better adapted to other crops. Here, however, the marsh-farmer is at work on another part of the marsh, while his two sons shock the corn, one building up the pile, whilst the other brings him the schooves.” p. 79


Editors note: Clearly, the young man at foreground is arranging harvested wheat, not corn, into a schock, or a collected group of grain sheaves. The boy in background arranging harvested corn stalks. The word schooves may be a dialectical variant from Norfolk. Clarification welcomed.

Title
Shocking Corn {Norfolk}
Photographer
Portfolio
Country
Medium
Atelier
Year
Dimensions

Image Dimensions16.6 x 16.4 cm

Support Dimensions42.6 x 34.0 cm

Print Notes

Recto: Engraved in plate by artist at LL corner: P.H. EMERSON, slight marginal water staining, protected by original engraved tissue guard opposite: Plate VIII.  | Shocking Corn. | {Norfolk.}

 

 

Exhibitions | Collections

Shocking the corn” registered for copyright at The National Archives, Kew- 23 April 1887. Reference: COPY  1/380/78

Provenance

Bristol & West of England Amateur Photographic Association, thence this archive via purchase, October, 2025: Oxfam Bookshop Wallingford, Oxfordshire England.