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A crisp New‑Year’s Day in 1850 finds the narrator alone in a quiet Kentucky homestead, where the bitter cold has frozen everything but the lingering sounds of creaking porches, a sleeping dog, and distant crickets. He tries to coax music from the silence, gathering a pair of winter‑weary birds in a handkerchief and arranging them a modest shelter among the bricks. The simple pleasures of books on a shelf become, to him, instruments that release fragrant, star‑like melodies, soothing the mind as the world outside remains hushed.
Beyond the thawed windows, the narrator wanders between the town’s bustling streets and the surrounding fields, feeling a tug between prose and poetry in his own nature. He watches his neighbors—a talkative bachelor named Jacob and the ever‑chatty widow Mrs. Walters—through a lens that mixes affection with gentle satire. Their voices, like the seasonal birds, add layers to the landscape, hinting at the quiet dramas that will unfold in this winter‑bound community.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (112K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-03-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1849–1925
Known for bringing Kentucky’s landscapes, speech, and social life vividly into fiction, this American novelist became one of the state’s first widely celebrated literary voices. His best-known books include A Kentucky Cardinal, The Choir Invisible, and The Reign of Law.
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by James Lane Allen

by James Lane Allen

by James Lane Allen

by James Lane Allen

by James Lane Allen

by James Lane Allen

by James Lane Allen

by James Lane Allen