The Barton Experiment

audiobook

The Barton Experiment

by John Habberton

EN·~3 hours·18 chapters

Chapters

18 total
1

PREFACE.

1:27
2

THE Barton Experiment. - CHAPTER I. REFORMERS AT WHITE HEAT.

13:08
3

CHAPTER II. BUSINESS vs. PHILANTHROPY.

11:02
4

CHAPTER III. A WET BLANKET.

13:00
5

CHAPTER IV. REFORM WITH MONEY IN IT.

13:48
6

CHAPTER V. AN ASTONISHED VIRGINIAN.

15:24
7

CHAPTER VI. A COURSE NEVER SMOOTH.

16:42
8

CHAPTER VII. SOME NATURAL RESULTS.

10:43
9

CHAPTER VIII. AN ESTIMABLE ORGANIZATION CRITICISED.

15:17
10

CHAPTER IX. SOME VOLUNTEER SHEPHERDS.

9:44

Description

In a modest Midwestern town, the summer evening bells toll as the community gathers for a grand temperance rally. The meeting, advertised on every corner and championed by a parade of societies—from the Sons of Temperance to the Washingtonians—fills the Methodist church to overflowing, with children perched on laps and makeshift seats fashioned from firewood. Amid the hymns of the Crystal Spring Glee Club and the lively strains of the brass band, the town’s wealthiest resident, Squire Tomple, presides over a collective plea to banish “King Alcohol” from everyday life.

The narrative uses this fervent gathering to explore how ordinary people strive for reform when organized effort seems out of reach. Through vivid portraits of earnest reformers, skeptical onlookers, and the occasional pretended drunkard, the story examines the tension between personal conviction and the pull of communal pressure. Listeners are invited to witness a slice of American life where ideals clash with reality, offering a thoughtful look at the power—and limits—of collective action.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (223K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Edwards and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2016-09-11

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

John Habberton

John Habberton

1842–1921

A 19th-century American humorist and journalist, he is best remembered for the hugely popular Helen's Babies, a comic look at family life that helped make him a household name. His career also stretched into newspaper criticism and fiction shaped by post–Civil War America.

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