The Octopus by Frank Norris (best e reader for academics TXT) đ
- Author: Frank Norris
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Then brusquely his tardy rage flamed up. By God, NO, it was not his fault; he had made no mistake. His energy, industry, and foresight had been sound. He had been merely the object of a colossal trick, a sordid injustice, a victim of the insatiate greed of the monster, caught and choked by one of those millions of tentacles suddenly reaching up from below, from out the dark beneath his feet, coiling around his throat, throttling him, strangling him, sucking his blood. For a moment he thought of the courts, but instantly laughed at the idea. What court was immune from the power of the monster? Ah, the rage of helplessness, the fury of impotence! No help, no hope,âruined in a brief instantâhe a veritable giant, built of great sinews, powerful, in the full tide of his manhood, having all his health, all his wits. How could he now face his home? How could he tell his mother of this catastrophe? And Sidneyâthe little tad; how could he explain to her this wretchednessâhow soften her disappointment? How keep the tears from out her eyesâhow keep alive her confidence in himâher faith in his resources?
Bitter, fierce, ominous, his wrath loomed up in his heart. His fists gripped tight together, his teeth clenched. Oh, for a moment to have his hand upon the throat of S. Behrman, wringing the breath from him, wrenching out the red life of himâstaining the street with the blood sucked from the veins of the People!
To the first friend that he met, Dyke told the tale of the tragedy, and to the next, and to the next. The affair went from mouth to mouth, spreading with electrical swiftness, overpassing and running ahead of Dyke himself, so that by the time he reached the lobby of the Yosemite House, he found his story awaiting him. A group formed about him. In his immediate vicinity business for the instant was suspended. The group swelled. One after another of his friends added themselves to it. Magnus Derrick joined it, and Annixter. Again and again, Dyke recounted the matter, beginning with the time when he was discharged from the same corporationâs service for refusing to accept an unfair wage. His voice quivered with exasperation; his heavy frame shook with rage; his eyes were injected, bloodshot; his face flamed vermilion, while his deep bass rumbled throughout the running comments of his auditors like the thunderous reverberation of diapason.
From all points of view, the story was discussed by those who listened to him, now in the heat of excitement, now calmly, judicially. One verdict, however, prevailed. It was voiced by Annixter: âYouâre stuck. You can roar till youâre black in the face, but you canât buck against the Railroad. Thereâs nothing to be done.â âYou can shoot the ruffian, you can shoot S. Behrman,â clamoured one of the group. âYes, sir; by the Lord, you can shoot him.â
âPoor fool,â commented Annixter, turning away.
Nothing to be done. No, there was nothing to be doneânot one thing. Dyke, at last alone and driving his team out of the town, turned the business confusedly over in his mind from end to end. Advice, suggestion, even offers of financial aid had been showered upon him from all directions. Friends were not wanting who heatedly presented to his consideration all manner of ingenious plans, wonderful devices. They were worthless. The tentacle held fast. He was stuck.
By degrees, as his wagon carried him farther out into the country, and open empty fields, his anger lapsed, and the numbness of bewilderment returned. He could not look one hour ahead into the future; could formulate no plans even for the next day. He did not know what to do. He was stuck.
With the limpness and inertia of a sack of sand, the reins slipping loosely in his dangling fingers, his eyes fixed, staring between the horsesâ heads, he allowed himself to be carried aimlessly along. He resigned himself. What did he care? What was the use of going on? He was stuck.
The team he was driving had once belonged to the Los Muertos stables and unguided as the horses were, they took the county road towards Derrickâs ranch house. Dyke, all abroad, was unaware of the fact till, drawn by the smell of water, the horses halted by the trough in front of Caraherâs saloon.
The ex-engineer dismounted, looking about him, realising where he was. So much the worse; it did not matter. Now that he had come so far it was as short to go home by this route as to return on his tracks. Slowly he unchecked the horses and stood at their heads, watching them drink.
âI donât see,â he muttered, âjust what I am going to do.â
Caraher appeared at the door of his place, his red face, red beard, and flaming cravat standing sharply out from the shadow of the doorway. He called a welcome to Dyke.
âHello, Captain.â
Dyke looked up, nodding his head listlessly.
âHello, Caraher,â he answered.
âWell,â continued the saloonkeeper, coming forward a step, âwhatâs the news in town?â
Dyke told him. Caraherâs red face suddenly took on a darker colour. The red glint in his eyes shot from under his eyebrows. Furious, he vented a rolling explosion of oaths.
âAnd now itâs your turn,â he vociferated. âThey ainât after only the big wheat-growers, the rich men. By God, theyâll even pick the poor manâs pocket. Oh, theyâll get their bellies full some day. It canât last forever. Theyâll wake up the wrong kind of man some morning, the man thatâs got guts in him, that will hit back when heâs kicked and that will talk to âem with a torch in one hand and a stick of dynamite in the other.â He raised his clenched fists in the air. âSo help me, God,â he cried, âwhen I think it all over I go crazy, I see red. Oh, if the people only knew their strength. Oh, if I could wake âem up. Thereâs not only Shelgrim, but thereâs others. All the magnates, all the butchers, all the blood-suckers, by the thousands. Their day will come, by God, it will.â
By now, the ex-engineer and the bar-keeper had retired to the saloon back of the grocery to talk over the details of this new outrage. Dyke, still a little dazed, sat down by one of the tables, preoccupied, saying but little, and Caraher as a matter of course set the whiskey bottle at his elbow.
It happened that at this same moment, Presley, returning to Los Muertos from Bonneville, his pockets full of mail, stopped in at the grocery to buy some black lead for his bicycle. In the saloon, on the other side of the narrow partition, he overheard the conversation between Dyke and Caraher. The door was open. He caught every word distinctly.
âTell us all about it, Dyke,â urged Caraher.
For the fiftieth time Dyke told the story. Already it had crystallised into a certain form. He used the same phrases with each repetition, the same sentences, the same words. In his mind it became set. Thus he would tell it to any one who would listen from now on, week after week, year after year, all the rest of his lifeââAnd I based my calculations on a two-cent rate. So soon as they saw I was to make money they doubled the tariffâall the traffic would bearâand I mortgaged to S. Behrmanâruined me with a turn of the handâstuck, cinched, and not one thing to be done.â
As he talked, he drank glass after glass of whiskey, and the honest rage, the open, above-board fury of his mind coagulated, thickened, and sunk to a dull, evil hatred, a wicked, oblique malevolence. Caraher, sure now of winning a disciple, replenished his glass.
âDo you blame us now,â he cried, âus others, the Reds? Ah, yes, itâs all very well for your middle class to preach moderation. I could do it, too. You could do it, too, if your belly was fed, if your property was safe, if your wife had not been murdered if your children were not starving. Easy enough then to preach law-abiding methods, legal redress, and all such rot. But how about US?â he vociferated. âAh, yes, Iâm a loud-mouthed rum-seller, ainât I? Iâm a wild-eyed striker, ainât I? Iâm a blood-thirsty anarchist, ainât I? Wait till youâve seen your wife brought home to you with the face you used to kiss smashed in by a horseâs hoofâkilled by the Trust, as it happened to me. Then talk about moderation! And you, Dyke, black-listed engineer, discharged employee, ruined agriculturist, wait till you see your little tad and your mother turned out of doors when S. Behrman forecloses. Wait till you see âem getting thin and white, and till you hear your little girl ask you why you all donât eat a little more and that she wants her dinner and you canât give it to her. Wait till you seeâat the same time that your family is dying for lack of breadâa hundred thousand acres of wheatâmillions of bushels of foodâgrabbed and gobbled by the Railroad Trust, and then talk of moderation. That talk is just what the Trust wants to hear. It ainât frightened of that. Thereâs one thing only it does listen to, one thing it is frightened ofâthe people with dynamite in their hands,âsix inches of plugged gaspipe. THAT talks.â
Dyke did not reply. He filled another pony of whiskey and drank it in two gulps. His frown had lowered to a scowl, his face was a dark red, his head had sunk, bull-like, between his massive shoulders; without winking he gazed long and with troubled eyes at his knotted, muscular hands, lying open on the table before him, idle, their occupation gone.
Presley forgot his black lead. He listened to Caraher. Through the open door he caught a glimpse of Dykeâs back, broad, muscled, bowed down, the great shoulders stooping.
The whole drama of the doubled freight rate leaped salient and distinct in the eye of his mind. And this was but one instance, an isolated case. Because he was near at hand he happened to see it. How many others were there, the length and breadth of the State? Constantly this sort of thing must occurâlittle industries choked out in their very beginnings, the air full of the death rattles of little enterprises, expiring unobserved in far-off counties, up in canyons and arroyos of the foothills, forgotten by every one but the monster who was daunted by the magnitude of no business, however great, who overlooked no opportunity of plunder, however petty, who with one tentacle grabbed a hundred thousand acres of wheat, and with another pilfered a pocketful of growing hops.
He went away without a word, his head bent, his hands clutched tightly on the cork grips of the handle bars of his bicycle. His lips were white. In his heart a blind demon of revolt raged tumultuous, shrieking blasphemies.
At Los Muertos, Presley overtook Annixter. As he guided his wheel up the driveway to Derrickâs ranch house, he saw the master of Quien Sabe and Harran in conversation on the steps of the porch. Magnus stood in the doorway, talking to his wife.
Occupied with the press of business and involved in the final conference with the Leagueâs lawyers on the eve of the latterâs departure for Washington, Annixter had missed the train that was to take him back to Guadalajara and Quien Sabe. Accordingly,
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