
The narrator opens with a wistful meditation on how New England’s once‑cozy hearths have gone cold, leaving families without a true center. He sketches a world where old customs—toast‑and‑cider evenings, the glow of a fire, the slow rhythm of a shared hearth—are replaced by fleeting comforts and a restless conformity that makes people drift from house to house like actors changing costumes.
Against this backdrop, he defends the simple, honest pleasure of a real wood‑fire. With vivid detail he describes the deep, three‑foot‑wide fireplace in his own home, its brass andirons gleaming, the scent of hickory and birch filling the room, and the satisfying crackle that no artificial gas log can mimic. The essay invites listeners to pause and consider how the loss of a genuine hearth may be reshaping both private lives and the broader sense of community.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (288K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Widger
Release date
2004-10-10
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1829–1900
A popular 19th-century American essayist and editor, he mixed wit with sharp observations about everyday life, travel, and politics. He is still widely remembered for co-writing The Gilded Age with Mark Twain, a title that became shorthand for an entire era.
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