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53 pages 1 hour read

Frank Norris

The Octopus: A Story of California

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 1901

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Book 2, Chapter 10Chapter Summaries & Analyses

Book 2, Chapter 10 Summary: “Conclusion”

Two days after leaving Bonneville, Presley is aboard Cedarquist’s India-bound ship—the Swanhilda, the very ship on which S. Behrman died. Before sailing to India, however, the vessel stops in San Francisco, where Presley visits Cedarquist’s office.

Cedarquist greets Presley and remarks briefly on Lyman’s political success with the Railroad, who recently named Lyman their favored candidate for the governor of California. However, Cedarquist is more interested in sharing about his new business venture: He’s done well to use his clipper wheat ships for Eastern trade, and the Swanhilda is the mother of the fleet. After rambling spiritedly about how much (and how riskily) he’s invested in this enterprise, he shoos Presley out the door with a “bon voyage.” As Presley walks into the street, he sees an ostentatious advertisement for Lyman’s election campaign.

With Presley back aboard the Swanhilda, the ship pushes off into the Pacific. The California coast fades into a hazy line of mountains on the horizon, and Presley thinks about everything held within that piece of land: his home, Bonneville, Guadalajara, Los Muertos, Quien Sabe—and the “terrible drama” of it all. His memory surveys the panorama of events leading up to the bloody blurred text
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