Emma Smith
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“Oh, what a
commingling of thought filled my mind for the moment, again
she is here, even in the seventh trouble – undaunted, firm, and
unwavering – unchangeable, affectionate Emma!”
-
Prophet Joseph Smith, Jr., August 16, 1842, see
title page verso of Mormon Enigma: Emma Hale
Smith, by Linda
King Newell and Valeen Tippetts Avery, 1994
“The sympathies of the
Latterday Saints are with the family of the
martyred prophet. I never saw a day in the world that I would not
almost worship that woman, Emma Smith, if she would be a saint instead
of being a devil... [We] would have been exceeding glad if the
prophet's family had come with us when we left Nauvoo... We would have
made cradles for them... and would have fed them on milk and honey.
Emma is naturally a very smart woman; she is subtle and ingenious....
she has made her children inherit lies. To my certain knowledge Emma
Smith is one of the damnest liars I know of on this earth; yet there is
no good thing I would refuse to do for her, if she would only be a
righteous woman.”
-
Prophet Brigham Young, October 1, 1866, as quoted
in Newell and Avery, “The Lion and the Lady: Brigham Young and Emma
Smith,” Utah
Historical Quarterly,
v. 48, Winter 1980, p. 82
“My mother was one of
the best poised women I ever met. Of the purest
and noblest intentions herself, she never submitted to be made a party
to anything low, wrong, or evil, was absolutely fearless where the
right was concerned; and was a just and generous mother. Her heart
never changed toward her children, and her fidelity to them never
wavered. It’s needless to say that we loved her.”
-
Joseph Smith III, January 17, 1893, see title page
verso of Mormon
Enigma: Emma Hale Smith, by Linda King Newell
and Valeen Tippetts Avery, 1994
“Jo stole his wife...
while [Isaac] Hale [Emma’s Father] was at Church.
My wife and I saw him on an old horse with Emma on behind as they
passed our house on their way to [be]... married.”
-
W.L. Hines statement in Naked Truths About
Mormonism, No.1,
1888
“Joseph’s wife was a
pretty woman, just as pretty a woman as I ever
saw. When she came to the Smiths she was disappointed and used to come
down to our house and sit down and cry. Said she was deceived and got
into a hard place.”
-
Lorenzo Saunders affidavit, September 20, 1884,
quoted in Brodie, No
Man Knows My History,
p. 42