
THE AMERICAN FRUGAL HOUSEWIFE. - DEDICATED TO - THOSE WHO ARE NOT ASHAMED OF ECONOMY.
INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER
ODD SCRAPS FOR THE ECONOMICAL.
SOAP.
SIMPLE REMEDIES.
VEGETABLES.
HERBS.
CHEAP DYE-STUFFS.
MEAT CORNED, OR SALTED, HAMS, &c.
CHOICE OF MEAT.
This listening experience introduces a straightforward manual on household thrift, written for families who value careful stewardship of both time and money. The author stresses gathering every fragment—whether a spare piece of cloth or an idle moment—and turning it into useful work. The tone is practical, rooted in everyday experience.
Readers learn simple, hands‑on strategies: knitting stockings and garters, repurposing fabric scraps into patchwork, and even teaching children to braid straw for bonnets or make feather fans. Detailed advice on keeping precise accounts, from pins to dollars, helps avoid overspending and prepares families for unexpected costs. The guide also warns against the allure of social pretensions that can drain limited resources.
Although first published in the early 1800s, the principles of frugality and purposeful labor resonate today, offering listeners timeless ideas for sustainable living. It invites you to rethink household tasks as opportunities for savings and skill‑building. A calm, instructive voice makes the old wisdom feel fresh and applicable.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (240K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-09-18
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1802–1880
A fearless 19th-century writer turned popular success into a platform for social change, taking on slavery, women's rights, and the treatment of Native Americans. She is also remembered for the poem later known as "Over the River and Through the Wood."
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