At the heart of every household in Jane Austen’s time, a fire burned. Fires provided a fixed source of heat and light, around which people gathered and moved, cooked and cleaned, lived and socialized. And while it’s lovely to imagine that families in Austen’s day gathered together in the evening simply because they enjoyed one another’s company, drawing near the fire on cold, damp days and evenings was a necessity. In a letter to Cassandra in October, Austen says, “It is cold enough now for us to prefer dining upstairs to dining below without a fire” (Letters 151). A warm fire provided heat, comfort, and community; at it, cold feet were thawed, conversations were held, prayers were said, books were read, and tea was made.

Chawton Cottage fireplace. Image Rachel Dodge
In her novels, Austen uses fires—and the heat and light that emanate from them—as a centerpiece for household and social activity, and she spins her characters and plots into motion around them in unique and surprising ways. Austen’s ingenious use of fires is fascinating to consider. In many scenes, she uses fires as clever props. However, fires also signify something deeper about the physical, mental, and emotional state of several key characters.
Fires as Clever Props
Let’s first consider the creative way Austen uses fires and fireplaces to move her characters in and out of rooms, group them together, and provide insight into their personalities. Many of these examples are quite humorous:
- Edmund Bertram goes to the fire on numerous occasions when he is upset and sits down to “stir the fire in thoughtful vexation” (MP 128),
- Meddlesome Mrs. Norris is, of course, found “fresh arranging and injuring the noble fire which the butler had prepared” (MP 273),
- Reserved Edward Ferrars finds a safe place to talk and read in the small family circle “drawn round the fire” after dinner with the Dashwood women (SS 90),
- Just the “slight remains” of a fire on a warm day are enough to push an over-heated, hot-and-bothered Frank Churchill over the edge (E 364),
- In Emma, they have “nothing else to do” and form “a sort of half-circle round the fire,” discussing the fire itself “till other subjects [are] started” (E 320),
- Fickle Collins changes his mind from Jane to Elizabeth in the matter of a few moments—in the time it takes Mrs. Bennet to stir the fire (PP 71), and
- When Captain Wentworth wants to cross the room to sit by Anne, he goes first to the fire-place, “probably for the sake of walking away from it soon afterwards” before he goes to sit “with less bare-faced design, by Anne” (P 255).
Fires as Subtle Clues: Marianne Dashwood, Mr. Woodhouse, and Fanny Price
Austen also uses fire to provide significant clues as to the physical, mental, and emotional well-being of her characters. During Austen’s lifetime, the spot nearest the fire was reserved for the elderly or infirm, as is seen throughout her novels. Furthermore, giving someone the chair closest to the fire indicated care and concern for their well-being. In the case of Marianne Dashwood, the distracted way she walks to and from the fire signals to Elinor that her mind and heart are in turmoil over Willoughby: “Marianne, too restless for employment, too anxious for conversation, walked from one window to the other, or sat down by the fire in melancholy meditation” (SS 172). In response to Marianne’s visible unhappiness, Mrs. Jennings treats her “with all the indulgent fondness of a parent,” tempting her with delicate foods and giving her the “best place by the fire” (193). However, when the usually healthy and active Marianne later spends a whole day “sitting shivering over the fire with a book in her hand…or in lying, weary and languid, on a sofa,” it’s clear she is suffering from more than emotional distress (307). Elinor hopes that a good night’s sleep will revive Marianne, but Colonel Brandon suspects the danger of something more serious. After a “very restless and feverish night,” the apothecary is sent for and Marianne sinks lower (307).
For Mr. Woodhouse, the very presence or lack of a fire has the power to give him comfort or cause him alarm. In “Mr. Woodhouse is not a Hypochondriac!,” Ted Bader argues that Mr. Woodhouse is aging, frail, and perhaps even suffering from “hypothyroidism” based on his diet, physical state, and behavior (Bader). In this case, Mr. Woodhouse’s concern for a fire is actually another clue toward the state of his health. Austen tells us that “Mr. Woodhouse’s tender habits required” a fire “almost every evening throughout the year” (E 351). He talks of fires repeatedly and can only be coaxed to leave his fireside when he is assured of a good fire elsewhere. On the day of the Donwell Abbey outing (on a sunny June day), the concern given to assure Mr. Woodhouse’s comfort and happiness is most touching: “Mr. Woodhouse was safely conveyed in his carriage, with one window down, to partake of this al-fresco party” (357). Emma and their friends wish to include him in the day’s activities, and so, “in one of the most comfortable rooms in the Abbey, especially prepared for him by a fire all the morning, he was happily placed, quite at his ease, ready to talk with pleasure of what had been achieved” (357). This kind of special care is given to someone in delicate health.
In Mansfield Park, a fire for Fanny denotes admittance into the family circle. Fanny finds great comfort in her “little white attic” at Mansfield; however, Mrs. Norris has cruelly “stipulated for there never being a fire” in Fanny’s room (MP 151). This signals to the reader both Mrs. Norris’s true character and Fanny’s station in the Bertram family circle. As Fanny lives there, not quite a family member, not quite a servant, she has no sense of belonging and feels keenly the lack of warmth from the Bertrams. Similarly, when she visits her family in Portsmouth, she again finds herself outside the family circle. In the very place she hopes to find solace, she is again (literally) left in the cold. She finds refuge “sitting together upstairs…quietly employed” with Susan, away from the family and “without a fire” (398). In both homes, she is an outsider. When she is given the luxury of a fire in her room at Mansfield, it reveals the change occurring at Mansfield: “She was struck, quite struck, when, on returning from her walk and going into the East room again, the first thing which caught her eye was a fire lighted and burning. A fire!” (322). This new “indulgence” coincides with her gradual movement into the heart of the family there. As the Bertram sisters continually disappoint Sir Thomas, and Fanny steadily wins his favor, Fanny takes her rightful place as a true member of the family and is treated as such.

Chawton House fireplace. Image Rachel Dodge.
Fuel Sources in Austen’s England
So what kind of fire did Edmund “stir…in thoughtful vexation” at Mansfield (MP 128)? Many of the examples in Austen’s novels appear to be wood fires, but the “coal fog” of London that lasted well into Queen Elizabeth II’s reign was already present during the Regency period. In All Things Austen, Kirsten Olsen says coal was quickly replacing wood during Austen’s lifetime, due to the “rate at which the English were consuming their natural resources” (Olsen 135). However, Deirdre Le Faye notes in Jane Austen: The World of Her Novels that in country houses, the open fireplaces were very large and burnt mostly wood because coal was transported by water, making it “a scared and very expensive fuel” (Le Faye 145).
The question of coal versus wood fires in Austen’s novels can most likely be answered by looking at the size and location of the houses featured, as well as the easiest and most economic fuel available to each. When Mr. Bingley spends a half hour “piling up the fire, lest [Jane] should suffer from the change of room” and suggests that she move “further from the door,” it’s clear he’s piling up wood (PP 54). Catherine Morland’s “spirits” are “immediately assisted by the cheerful blaze of a wood fire” in her room on her first night at the Abbey (NA 167), and the “roaring Christmas fire” in Persuasion must be wood (135). In Mansfield Park, however, the Price family has a coal fire (MP 379). At the Price home, coal was most likely burned because they lived in Portsmouth, a port city, but on the larger estates, away in the quiet countryside, wood was more commonly burned. Matthew White explains that the “growing demand for coal after 1750 revealed serious problems with Britain’s transport system.” A network of canals was build to cut down on the price of coal and by 1815 “over 2,000 miles of canals were in use in Britain” (White). By the time of Austen’s death, coal had become increasingly available even to the country homes of England.
You can follow Rachel Dodge at www.racheldodge.com or on Twitter (twitter.com/RachelEDodge), Instagram (@kindredspiritbooks), and Facebook (facebook.com/racheldodgebooks).
Works Cited
Austen, Jane, and R. W. Chapman. The Oxford Illustrated Jane Austen. Oxford UP, 1988.
Austen, Jane. Jane Austen’s Letters. Edited by Deirdre Le Faye, 4th ed., Oxford UP, 2011.
Bader, Ted. “Mr. Woodhouse is not a Hypochondriac!” Persuasions On-Line, vol. 21, no. 2, 2000 http://www.jasna.org/persuasions/on-line/vol21no2/bader.html. Accessed 1 September 2017.
Le Faye, Deirdre. Jane Austen: The World of Her Novels. London: Frances Lincoln, 2002.
Olsen, Kirstin. All Things Austen: A Concise Encyclopedia of Austen’s World. Oxford, Greenwood World, 2008.
White, Matthew. “The Industrial Revolution.” British Library, bl.uk, 14 October 2009, https://www.bl.uk/georgian-britain/articles/the-industrial-revolution. Accessed 1 September 2017.
For additional articles related to this topic:
Read more about keeping warm in Regency England here: https://janeaustensworld.wordpress.com/2009/01/21/keeping-warm-in-the-regency-era-part-one/
Learn more about coal in Regency England here:
Kane, Kathryn. “Coal: Heat Source or Gemstone?” The Regency Redingote, 3 June 2011, https://regencyredingote.wordpress.com/2011/06/03/coal-heat-source-or-gemstone/.
Enjoy these entertaining directions to servants on the proper care and lighting of a coal fire:
Boyle, Laura. “Directions how to make a fire with Lehigh coal.” JaneAusten.co.uk, 20 June 2011, https://www.janeausten.co.uk/directions-how-to-make-a-fire-with-lehigh-coal/.
Find out more about London’s air quality during Jane Austen’s time here:
Sanna, Antonio. “Jane Austen’s London.” Journal of Medical Humanities, 16 April 2017, pp. 1-10. Research Gate, https://www.researchgate.net/publication/316156566_Jane_Austen%27s_London.
I lived the first 52 years of my life with nothing but open fires or the closed stove for warmth, and last year I installed radiators. There’s nothing like an open fire, but I have no servants to clean the ash out and heave the coal, and it gets very wearisome, especially when nursing an invalid. And the modern coked coals give out about four times as much heat as the pure coal, even good Welsh coal, that I remember from my childhood, where we would huddle round the fire, scorching on the one side, draughts flirting under clothing on the other side. Modern fires too have matches for lighting them, not flint and tinder, and even with safety matches, the curse of the ‘wrong wind’ blowing back smoke in the face, and making the fire sullen and unwilling to start. And the dust! everything is quickly covered in a fine patina of flying ash and smuts, and cleaning is harder. But then, there’s nothing like roasting potatoes in the embers raked out onto the hearth, or having a kettle singing on the hob.
What a lovely comment and so perfect for this topic! I grew up building a fire in our wood stove, the only heat source in our home. It was pretty miserable on winter mornings before we built a fire, but I still miss the cozy warmth it gave off when it was going strong on cold winter days and evenings.
A few of the very old British hotels and residences in England, Ireland, Scotland and India burn coal in the fireplaces to this day. Not a good odor for today’s travelers but…well,.there you are! Love reading your blogs…Thank you.
How interesting! Thank you for the comment!
interesting
So appreciate the research and analysis that you do-very interesting and informative. I am continually perplexed when residences are referred to as cottages, but the picture reveals a structure so large that Americans would call it a mansion. Chawton Cottage is a good example. Any idea why middle class residences were so huge? Was it necessary for some reason, or was it due to imitating the very large houses of the aristocracy, and necessary for social standing and respectability? Even rectories were huge.
What a wonderful comment. I’ve always thought the word “cottage” seemed strange, too! I suppose in relation to the “Great House” at Chawton, Jane’s house might be considered a cottage. I’m sure the middle classes did aspire to bigger, more expansive houses, just as our middle classes do today. Plus, we must remember that they also needed room for their servants and enough indoor work space during the cold winter months for kitchen, larder, laundry, etc.
Very interesting this post about fire in Austen’s books. It makes us see how skillful the writer is in building the perfect set to every happening or feeling. In SS, the room is insufferably hot with fire and candles the night Marianne finally meets Willoughby on that dreadful party in London.
That’s a wonderful example! Austen is always mentioning hot rooms when people all gather together in one place, with candles and fires. (I don’t even want to think about how it must have smelled!) I cover this topic (and candles and candlelight) in Part 2, which is coming soon!
Vic…I notice you live in Richmond, as do I. I so enjoy your articles and post links to your site on my writer’s page. My characters are a generation earlier than Jane, but many of your essays, such as this one, apply to the late Revolutionary era as easily as they do to Jane’s early 19th century settings. Thanks for your knowledge of the era as well as your thoughtful insights on JA’s work.
How lovely! Thank you for reading!
Debbie, thank you for your compliment, which should go to Rachel Dodge, the author of this wonderful post. She has been contributing amazingly detailed and accurate content to this site, for which I am so grateful. Without Rachel’s contributions, this blog would lie dormant for many months at a time.
fascinating,,,I think of a fire or hearth as the heart of the home
it’s the reason the middle of a log cabin quilt square is red–signifying the fire/heart and heart of the home.
denise
Yes, a primeval feeling of comfort going back to when the fire was all that stood between stone age man and sabre toothed tigers …. the Romans did not have their Lares and Penates for nothing, the familial gods of hearth and home.
Yes, so true!!
You are right about the importance of Fanny’s fire in “Mansfield Park”. Its absence is indicative of her general exclusion from the family – its warmth and intimacy, and its introduction to her attic signals her inclusion. Ironically, when it is lit every day, she no longer needs it.
Just to confirm what Flo Stasch said above, here in the U.K. many people still burn coal. However, as many of us live in “smokeless zones”, the coal is often not what used to be called town coal, but “smokeless” coal. An open fire is considered attractive and desirable.
Thank you for your interesting posts.