
audiobook
The narrator opens with a gentle meditation on the double‑edged nature of memory: recalling the faces and voices of the past can feel like a pleasant shade beside a fire, yet the very act of keeping those impressions alive becomes a quiet duty. He muses that the more renowned the remembered figures, the brighter their “gleams” appear, and the more inevitable the pressure to honor them in recollection. This reflective tone sets the stage for a series of literary portraits that feel both personal and historically resonant.
The first portrait centers on the charismatic writer whose fame rode the Atlantic from the wild West to the cultured East. Arriving in Boston, he is described with vivid detail—his jaunty beard, sparkling eyes, and effortless charm that wins over every host. The narrator’s admiration is palpable, capturing the excitement of meeting a cultural “prince” whose stories have already reshaped American imagination.
Language
en
Duration
~31 minutes (29K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-10-22
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1837–1920
A leading voice of American realism, he wrote sharply observed novels about everyday life and helped shape the literary culture of the late 1800s. As an editor and critic, he also encouraged writers such as Henry James and Sarah Orne Jewett while building a reputation as the “Dean of American Letters.”
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