
On a crisp Christmas Eve just after the war’s end, Aaron Sisson trudges home along a lonely, black‑streaked railway line, his mind still rattling from a heated union meeting. He reaches the modest house he built with his own hands, where his two young daughters burst out, eager to set up a pine tree they’ve salvaged from the garden’s frozen ground. The scene is intimate and stark: a cold yard, a wheelbarrow, a spade, and the simple ritual of coaxing a lopsided tree into a box, all under the watchful eyes of a patient wife who balances sewing, cooking, and a baby’s soft coo.
The narrative captures the quiet resilience of a mining family, juxtaposing the lingering tension of post‑war life with the hopeful glow of holiday lights. As Aaron wrestles with the prickly branches and the weight of his responsibilities, the listener senses both the comfort of home and the undercurrent of a community still finding its footing after conflict.
Language
en
Duration
~10 hours (623K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Doug Levy, and David Widger
Release date
2003-10-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1885–1930
A fierce, searching voice of English literature, this novelist and poet wrote with unusual candor about love, class, desire, and the strain modern life puts on the human spirit. His books still feel alive because they push past manners and convention to ask what it really means to live fully.
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