The Starbucks, by Opie Percival 
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Title: The Starbucks 
Author: Opie Percival Read 
 
Release Date: August 3, 2006 [eBook #18984] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
STARBUCKS*** 
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o=B92-253-31804846&view=toc 
 
THE STARBUCKS 
A New Novel 
by 
OPIE READ 
Author of "The Jucklins," "Old Ebenezer," "My Young Master," "A 
Tennessee Judge," "A Kentucky Colonel," "Len Gansett," "On the 
Suwanee River," "Emmett Bonlore," Etc. 
 
[Illustration: "SHE WAS THE ONLY MOTHER I KNOWED."] 
 
Character Illustration, True to Life, Reproduced in Colors 
 
Laird & Lee, Chicago 
Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1902, by William H. 
Lee, in the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C.
Contents 
CHAPTER PAGE 
I. The People of the Hills, 9 II. Jim, the Preacher, 17 III. Getting 
Acquainted, 32 IV. At the Post Office, 50 V. Couldn't Quarrel in Peace, 
63 VI. Hadn't Listened, 84 VII. Not So Far Out of the World, 102 VIII. 
The Spirit that Played with Her, 111 IX. At Dry Fork, 118 X. Tied to a 
Tree, 134 XI. Reading the News, 148 XII. Didn't Do Anything Heroic, 
166 XIII. Might Wipe her Feet on Him, 183 XIV. An Old Man 
Preached, 198 XV. The Girl and the Churn, 207 XVI. The 
Appointment Comes, 220 XVII. Not to Tell Her a Lie, 234 XVIII. 
Down the Road, 252 XIX. Old Folks Left Alone, 263 XX. Met it in the 
Road, 271 XXI. Into the World beyond the Hills, 279 XXII. Came to 
Weep, 287 XXIII. A Trip Not Without Incident, 296 XXIV. Two 
Fruitful Witnesses, 303 XXIV. Too Proud to Beg, 312 
 
ILLUSTRATIONS 
REPRODUCED IN COLORS FROM PHOTOGRAPHS 
PAGE 
"She was the only mother I knowed," Frontispiece 
"Them what hain't had trouble ain't had no cause to look fur the Lord," 
48 
"Yes, I d-d-d-do say so, a-a-a-atter a f-f-f-fashion." 80 
"Kotch 'em stealin' hosses, I reckon." 128 
"Well," Margaret exclaimed, "I never was so surprised." 208 
"Go on erway an' let me talk ter myse'f. You kain't talk." 240 
"If you air the Jedge, I am sorter diserp'inted in you." 288
"Jedge, there ain't no better man than he is, an' for the Lord's sake don't 
hang him." 304 
 
"THE STARBUCKS." 
[From the Drama of the Same Name.] 
CHAPTER I. 
THE PEOPLE OF THE HILLS. 
In every age of the world people who live close to nature have, by the 
more cultivated, been classed as peculiar. An ignorant nation is brutal, 
but an uneducated community in the midst of an enlightened nation is 
quaint, unconsciously softened by the cultivation and refinement of 
institutions that lie far away. In such communities live poets with lyres 
attuned to drollery. Moved by the grandeurs of nature, the sunrise, the 
sunset, the storm among the mountains, the tiller of the gullied hill-side 
field is half dumb, but with those apt "few words which are seldom 
spent in vain," he charicatures his own sense of beauty, mingling rude 
metaphor with the language of "manage" to a horse. 
I find that I am speaking of a certain community in Tennessee. And 
perhaps no deductions drawn from a general view of civilization would 
apply to these people. Some of their feuds, it is said, may be traced 
back to the highlands of Scotland, and it is true that many of their 
expressions seem to come from old books which they surely have never 
read, but they do not eat oats, nor do they stand in sour awe of Sunday. 
What religion they have is a pleasure to them. In the log meeting-house 
they pray and sing, sometimes with a half-open eye on a fellow to be 
"thrashed" on the following day for not having voted as he agreed; 
"Amen" comes fervently from a corner made warm by the ardor of the 
repentant sinner; "Hallelujah!" is shouted from the mourner's bench, 
and a woman in nervous ecstasy pops her streaming hair; but the 
average man has come to talk horse beneath the trees, and the young 
fellow with sun-burnt down on his lip is there slily to    
    
		
	
	
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