THE FURNISHED ROOM by O. HENRY

THE FURNISHED ROOM by O. HENRY

Author: Jon Hagadorn February 15, 2026 Duration: 21:11

"The Furnished Room" is widely considered one of O. Henry's most somber and haunting stories. Unlike his more lighthearted or humorous tales, this one leans heavily into urban loneliness and tragedy.
 
The story follows a weary young man searching the boarding houses of New York City's Lower West Side for a woman he loves—an aspiring singer named Eloise Vashner. He has been searching for five months.
He rents a "furnished room" from a cold, ghostly landlady. The room is dilapidated and smells of stale air and cheap perfume. As he sits in the dark, he is suddenly overwhelmed by the strong, distinct scent of mignonette—the exact fragrance Eloise used to wear. Convinced she has been in the room, he frantically searches the furniture and cracks in the wall for a sign of her, but finds nothing. 
Publication and Context
Written/Published: The story was first published in the New York World in 1904 and later included in his famous 1906 collection, The Four Million.
Historical Setting: At the turn of the century, New York was flooded with young people from rural areas seeking fame in the arts. O. Henry captures the dark side of this "American Dream"—the anonymity and despair of the big city.
Possible Inspirations
While O. Henry rarely cited specific inspirations, scholars point to several factors:
Personal Tragedy: O. Henry (William Sydney Porter) lived a life marked by loss. His wife, Athol Estes, died young from tuberculosis. His own experiences living in cheap New York boarding houses after his release from prison gave him an intimate, firsthand look at the "transient" lifestyle.
The "Furnished Room" Culture: During the early 1900s, boarding houses were a unique social phenomenon. They were places where thousands of people lived in close proximity but remained total strangers. O. Henry was fascinated by the idea that a room could hold the "ghosts" or lingering energies of those who stayed there for just a week.
The Mignonette Scent: This specific flower was a popular Victorian symbol for "your qualities surpass your charms." It adds a layer of sensory nostalgia that O. Henry likely drew from the romantic literature of his era.

Che4ck out our website at www.bestof1001stories.com for thousands of stories from Sherlock Holmes to WWII.

Current Specials: How Teddy Roosevelt saved the Buffalo at 1001 Stories From The Old West

'The Sky Train and The Sphinx' at 1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries Podcast

Enjoy the first radio episodes of "The Shadow' with Gizelle Ericksonn at 1001 Ghost, Chiller & Lovecraft


Step into a world where every episode is a journey into a different time and place, guided by the voices of literary masters. 1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales, curated and narrated by Jon Hagadorn, is a quiet sanctuary for those who appreciate the crafted prose of a bygone era. This podcast focuses exclusively on the golden age of short fiction, pulling masterful works from the period between 1850 and 1930. Each selection is chosen for its enduring power to connect, offering narratives that resonate with emotional depth and timeless human experience. You’ll hear the suspenseful twists of Arthur Conan Doyle and Agatha Christie, the poignant social observations of Edith Wharton, the rugged adventures of Jack London, and the finely drawn characters of O. Henry. The collection also includes the gothic intensity of Edgar Allan Poe, the economic storytelling of Ernest Hemingway, and the heartfelt tales of Henry Lawson, among many others. Hagadorn’s narration is clear and considered, designed to let the authors' original language shine. It’s an archive built for repeated listening, whether you’re discovering these stories for the first time or revisiting old favorites. For anyone seeking a break from the modern noise with a truly classic tale, this consistently updated podcast provides a deep and rewarding library of fiction’s finest moments.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales
Podcast Episodes
FALL FAMILY SPECIAL:   BRIGHTEN'S SISTER-IN-LAW  by HENRY LAWSON [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 49:07
This story was a great find and is still one of our best performing episodes. Henry Lawson's "Brighten's Sister-In-Law" is a poignant narrative, a classic example of the Australian bush ballad. The story recounts a drove…
PERJURED by EDITH MIRILEES [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 31:22
A teen-aged boy witnesses an horrific death by the railroad tracks of his small town and to build his status with the older boys he hangs with he adds a lie to his story, saying that a known local townsman was near the b…
A GRAY SLEEVE by STEPHEN CRANE [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 37:11
After a skirmish a Civil War cavalry Captain enters a house thinking it might be housing enemy and finds a scared young lady holding a gun behind her back. The Captain, after investigating the house to find two other fam…
DAVID SWAN by NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 19:31
A young man heading for college in Boston decides to catch a nap in a cozy little glen not far from the stage stop. While sleeping soundly he is silently approached by three different entities- the first promises wealth,…
MARJORIE DAW (PT 2 OF 2)   T.B. ALDRICH [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 23:46
Our two best friends continue to write back and forth until John (Jack) Fleming's leg heals enough to travel, which he does, taking the train to new Hampshire to meet the girl of his dreams, depite Edward's best efforts…
MARJORIE DAW (PT 1)  by THOMAS B. ELDRICH [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 27:14
Two close pals exchange letters, one having had to cancel his trip to a summer spot in New Hampshire with his friend due to a broken leg. In the letters the pal in New Hampshire begins to write of the presence of a beaut…